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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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March 10, 2016
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Terrorist
Groups Intensify Targeting of Children for Jihad
by Abha Shankar
IPT News
March 10, 2016
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Children have become
a key target group for recruitment by terrorist groups who are increasingly
turning to social media to showcase their successful efforts in
indoctrinating them for jihad. In January, for example, Wilayat Khorasan
(or "Khorasan Province"), the Islamic State (ISIS)'s branch in
the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, released a propaganda video titled, "Cubs of the
Caliphate Camp," that showed young boys undergoing training for jihad.
Screenshots from the video showed young boys dressed in camouflage learning how to
fire Kalashnikov assault rifles. The training center, likely located in
Afghanistan's eastern province of Nangarhar, is reported to be the fourth such Islamic State training
facility in the region.
Similar camps are openly flourishing in Syria and Iraq, where children
are being actively recruited by ISIS to serve as the next generation of
fighters for the terrorist group. A new report published in the Combating Terrorism Center at
West Point's CTC Sentinel claims that in the past year, at least 89
male child soldiers were eulogized as "martyrs" on Twitter as
well as the Islamic State's official Telegram channel. The child soldiers
hailed from countries as varied as Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya, and Nigeria,
Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Libya, the United Kingdom, France, and
Australia.
Four percent of the child soldiers died conducting suicide missions and
another 18 percent were inghimasis (meaning "to plunge" in
Arabic) – that meant that the children fought alongside adults to attack
enemy positions with light automatic weapons and subsequently killed
themselves by detonating suicide vests, the report said.
The published photographs of the child martyrs showed a consistent
"theme of happiness at the prospect of martyrdom." Children could
be seen "standing in orchards and meadows, scenery presumably chosen
to echo the paradise to which they thought they were destined."
Another important conclusion of the report was that, unlike other
conflicts where child soldiers are a "strategy of last resort"
and serve to replace adults in battle, ISIS' child soldiers "are
fighting alongside, rather than in lieu of, adult males."
Recruiting children
not only ensures a next generation of fighters for a terrorist group but
it's also easier brainwashing young impressionable minds. "It's been
done for the same reasons that Hitler had the Hitler Youth," Charlie
Winter of the Quillam Foundation, a counter-terrorism think tank based in
London, told NBC News.
"There's no term better suited to it than brainwashing,"
Winters added. "These children won't have any point of reference other
than jihadism so the ideology will be a lot more firm in their heads and
lot more difficult to dislodge."
In October, London-based Channel 4 News published a video
that showcased examples of ISIS "nurturing a new generation for the
Caliphate to fight infidels."Children undergo rigorous physical
training and pledge allegiance to the terrorist group by declaring: "I
must listen and obey even if I have to die."
A former instructor who escaped one such camp after being "disillusioned
by the scale of violence" perpetrated by ISIS confessed that the
terrorist group convinces children into jihad by telling them that
"It's written in the Quran you have to fight jihad" and that
"all of us will die martyrs and reach heaven, all of us."
Children who refuse to fight jihad on behalf of ISIS not only risk
death, but also of torture and other punishment. In one horrifying example,
ISIS chopped off a 14-year-old's hand and foot with a butcher's knife as a
warning to other children not to resist taking up arms in support of the
group. ISIS told the gathered children and teenagers, "This man is an
infidel so we will cut off his hand and foot," and "All those who
fight against us will have their hands and feet cut off."
Children also are encouraged to spy on their parents who, in turn, risk
death if they object to their kids joining the terrorist group.
In July, ISIS released a video showing a young boy beheading a
soldier serving in the Syrian Army under the watch of a senior militant
near the ancient city of Palmyra. Earlier last year, ISIS released a video showing a boy who appeared to be younger than
15-years-old behead two alleged Russian spies. In another example, Khaled
Sharrouf, who left Australia to join Islamic State fighters in Syria,
posted a photo of his young son holding up a decapitated head of
a man.
Groups such as ISIS have "aggressively targeted children for
recruitment, providing free lectures and schooling that included weapons
and other military training," a Human Rights Watch report said.
This was confirmed by a United Nations report that asserted that children as
young as 12 or 13 are being recruited by ISIS to undergo military training
in Mosul, Iraq. Boys who had been forcibly recruited by the Islamic State
but managed to escape confessed to their families that they had been
"forced to form the front line to shield" fighters as well as
coerced to donate blood for injured fighters. ISIS also uses children for
propaganda purposes, and the report cited an example of militants forcing
two sick children at a cancer hospital in Mosul to pose for pictures
holding the Islamic State flag that were subsequently posted on the
Internet.
The Islamic State
also has been using the Internet to ensnare young girls into jihad. Online
chat rooms routinely advise girls "on how to discretely disobey their
parents and sneak away" to the Islamic State. When girls express
concern at the financial cost of taking the trip, they're told to "get
in touch privately and we will help you out." The terrorist group has
also set up a "marriage bureau" in Aleppo province
of northern Syria for "single women and widows who would like to marry
ISIS fighters."
Recruiting children for jihad is not restricted to just the Islamic
State. A report
on Jafrianews.com claims the Taliban has enlisted hundreds of children to
wage jihad in Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2006. Several juvenile
recruits join the Taliban willingly to avenge the killing of family
members. The new volunteers then go through a "systematic motivation
process" where "they are made to watch video films, showing
physical torture and killing of Muslims [sic] women and children in
Kashmir, Afghanistan, Chechnya and Somalia by what they call
infidels," the report said.
In a May feature story on child suicide bombers, the CBS News
program 60 Minutes noted that children as young as 7 are being
recruited as suicide bombers in Afghanistan and Pakistan. "Children
accept what you say after you talk to them just a couple of times," a
Taliban commander said. "They can be used in rickshaw, bicycle or
motorcycle attacks."
Training takes four to seven months, he added, and recruits were picked
up for different tasks based on their abilities, including for the job of a
suicide bomber.
Documents from the Joint Intelligence Group at the U.S.
military prison at Guantanamo Bay included statements from detainees that
detailed methods employed by the Taliban to indoctrinate children.
"Taliban used hard-line interpretation of the Quran as a recruitment
tool" and "[j]uveniles are more willing to martyr themselves due
to their lack of reasoning on taking innocent lives," the documents
show.
In the PBS documentary Children of the Taliban, journalist
Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy interviewed Taliban commander Qari Hussain, who bragged
recruiting children as young as five. "Children are tools to achieve
God's will. And whatever comes your way, you sacrifice it," Hussain
said.
Child recruitment also is widespread among terrorist groups operating in
Africa. In Mali, jihadists recruit poor children from rural areas who have been
sent to distant Islamic schools by their families, who cannot afford to pay
for their school fees or to feed them. Sometimes the children volunteer to
join the terrorist group for money or following indoctrination in religious
schools.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram has been using girls between the ages of 11 and 15 as female
suicide bombers to spread terror in the region. "It's easier for women
and girls to slip into crowds where they can carry out mass atrocities than
for men," Mausi Segun, a Nigerian researcher with Human Rights Watch
in the capital city of Abuja, explained. "In northern Nigeria, the dressing of
the woman gives her the ability to move about with all kinds of things
undetected. She wears a long, voluminous head veil that reaches, sometimes,
to the ankles - and also because security forces are not prone to searching
women."
The Palestinian
terrorist group Hamas has been imparting military training to children in the Gaza
Strip to fight against Israel through summer camps specifically set up for
the purpose for several years. In March 2015, the Israel-based Center for
Near East Policy Research (CNEPR) released a documentary, "Children's Army of
Hamas," that shows extensive training and indoctrination footage from
Hamas summer camps, including children engaging in target practice with
combat rifles, rockets, and anti-aircraft equipment. Hamas political leader
Ismail Haniyeh can be heard at the documentary's
conclusion saying: "Jews, beware! This generation is not afraid to
confront you in your centers. This is the generation of the stones! This is
the generation of the missiles! This is the generation of the tunnels! This
is the generation of the suicide bombers!"
Hamas has used its media arm, Al-Aqsa TV, to indoctrinate
Palestinian children and glorify jihad for years. In 2007, the television show, "Tomorrow's Pioneers"
featured a Mickey Mouse knockoff named Farfour. For several weeks, Farfour
and his child co-host urged children to violently resist Israel while
touting the supremacy of Islam. After Farfour refused to succumb to
pressure from "authorities" to give up his land, his co-host
Saraa informed
viewers that he had been "martyred at the hands of the criminals, the
murderers, the murderers of innocent children...."
Related Topics: Abha Shankar,
ISIS,
child
recruitment, Cubs
of the Caliphate, Wilayat
Khorasan, CTC
Centinel, Charlie
Winter, Quilliam
Foundation, Human
Rights Watch, child
brides, Taliban,
Qari
Hussain, Boko
Haram, Hamas
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