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In Mosul orphanage, Daesh groomed child soldiers

By Reuters - Feb 18,2017 - Last updated at Feb 18,2017

Displaced Iraqi children queue up to be checked by a medical team during a visit to the Al Agha camp where Iraqi families from the nearby villages of Tal Afar, southwest of Mosul, are taking shelter as Iraqi forces continue their military operation to recapture Mosul from the Daesh extremists on Thursday (AFP photo)

MOSUL, Iraq- When the boys first arrived at the Daesh terror group training facility in eastern Mosul they would cry and ask about their parents, who went missing when the militants rampaged through northern Iraq in 2014.

But as the weeks passed they appeared to absorb the group’s ultra-hardline ideology, according to a worker at the former orphanage where they were housed.

The children, aged from three to 16 and mostly Shiite Muslims or minority Yazidis, began referring to their own families as apostates after they were schooled by the militant fighters, he said.

The boys were separated from the girls and infants, undergoing indoctrination and training to become “cubs of the caliphate — a network of child informers and fighters used by the extremeists to support their military operations.

The complex in Mosul’s Zuhur district, which had been home to local orphans until they were kicked out Daesh, was one of several sites the extremists used across the city.

It is now shuttered, its doors sealed with padlocks by Iraqi security forces.

Daesh withdrew before Iraqi forces launched a US-backed offensive in October to retake the city, but during a Reuters visit last month there were still reminders of the group’s attempt to brainwash dozens of children.

A saying attributed to the Prophet Mohammed is painted in black on one wall, urging children to learn to swim, shoot and ride horses. Inside the building is a swimming pool, now dry and full of rubbish.

 

‘A’ for apple, ‘b’ for bomb

 

In another room sits a stack of textbooks Daesh had amended to fit its brutal ethos.

Arithmetic problems in a fourth grade maths book use imagery of warfare, while the cover bears a rifle made up of equations. History books focus exclusively on the early years of Islam and emphasise martial events.

Another textbook includes ordinary words like apple and ant beside army, bomb and sniper. Martyr, spy and mortar also appear alongside zebra crossing, yawn and X-box. 

The word “woman” is depicted by a formless black figure wearing the full niqab covering. All faces in the books — even those of animals — are blurred, in keeping with an Islamic proscription against such images.

The orphanage worker, who was cowed into staying on after the militants took over in 2014, said girls who were brought to the centre were often married off to the group’s commanders.

The man asked not to be named for fear of reprisals by Daesh, which still controls the entire western half of Mosul. He was shot in the leg during recent clashes.

He said the militants, mostly Iraqis, taught the Shiite children how to pray in the tradition of Sunni Islam and forced the Yazidis to convert.

They memorised the Koran, were taught to treat outsiders as infidels and conducted physical exercise in the yard, which has since grown over.

 

Old enough to fight

 

A pair of colourful plastic slides and swing sets now sit untouched amid shattered glass, casings from a grenade launcher and a suicide bomber’s charred remains — signs of the militants’ fierce resistance as they retreated late last year.

Reuters could not independently verify the orphanage worker’s comments. But local residents gave similar accounts, and Daesh has published numerous videos showing how it trains young fighters and even makes them execute prisoners.

New batches of children arrived at the Zuhur orphanage every few weeks from outside Mosul, including a few from neighbouring Syria, while older boys were sent to the town of Tel Afar west of Mosul for intensive military training for duties including with Daesh’s courts or vice squad, residents said.

“After six months at the camps, some of the boys came back to spend a weekend with their younger brothers. They were wearing uniforms and carrying weapons,” the orphanage worker said, fingering black and yellow prayer beads.

One of the boys, Mohammed, was killed last summer during the battle in the city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, he said, recounting how the other children wept upon learning the news.

A few weeks before the Mosul offensive began, Daesh cancelled lessons and sent the boys to guard an airfield near Tel Afar which pro-government forces later seized, he said.

 

“I told them, ‘If you see the army, drop your weapons and tell them you are orphans. Maybe they will spare your lives’”.

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