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Iraqi boys’ harrowing tale of captivity, training by Daesh
YESICA FISCH & MAYA ALLERUZZO | AP | Published — Wednesday 10 May 2017

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Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, pauses during an interview in the Esyan Camp. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

KABARTO CAMP, Iraq: They made the captive children, malnourished and weak from hunger, fight over a single tomato. Then the Daesh group militants told them, “In paradise, you’ll be able to eat whatever you want. But first you have to get to paradise, and you do that by blowing yourself up.”

The lesson was part of the indoctrination inflicted by the militants on boys from Iraq’s Yazidi religious minority after the extremist group overran the community’s towns and villages in northern Iraq. The group forced hundreds of boys, some as young as 7 or 8, into training to become fighters and suicide bombers, infusing them with its murderous ideology.

Now boys who escaped captivity are struggling to regain some normalcy, living in camps for the displaced along with what is left of their families. After surviving beatings, watching horrific atrocities, being held for months or years apart from their parents, losing loved ones and narrowly escaping death themselves, they are plagued by nightmares, anxiety and outbursts of violence.

“Even here I’m still very afraid,” said 17-year-old Ahmed Ameen Koro, who spoke to The Associated Press in the sprawling Esyan Camp in northern Iraq, where he now lives with his mother, sister and a brother, the only surviving members of his family. “I can’t sleep properly because I see them in my dreams.”

Ahmed was 14 when the militants stormed into the Yazidi heartland around the northern town of Sinjar in the summer of 2014.

Tens of thousands of Yazidis were killed in the assault on Sinjar and neighboring towns and the militants kidnapped thousands of women and girls as sex slaves. The Yazidi minority, whose ancient faith combines aspects of Islam, Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Judaism, is considered heretical by the Islamic extremists. US-backed Kurdish forces drove Daesh out of Sinjar in November 2015, but few Yazidis have returned, and an estimated 3,500 remain in Daesh captivity, scattered around its territory in Iraq and Syria, according to Human Rights Watch.

“They looked like monsters”

It was the morning of Aug. 3, 2014, when the Daesh fighters descended on Ahmed’s village of Hardan. The family tried to flee, but their car couldn’t hold everyone. So Ahmed, his 13-year-old brother Amin, and four cousins set off on foot while his father drove the others to the nearby village of Khader Amin. The boys were to wait for Ahmed’s father to pick them up at a roadway intersection outside of Hardan.

But his father never came: The militants seized him and the rest of the family, and his father was never seen again. Daesh fighters then captured Ahmed and the other boys at the intersection.

The boys were taken to the Daesh-held town of Tal Afar, some 30 miles away, where they were kept in a boys’ school along with dozens of other boys and teens. The adult men were taken away, leaving the women and girls.

“They chose and took the girls they liked,” Ahmed recalled. “I remember the girls were crying, as well as the mothers. They were dragging these girls from the arms of their mothers.”
“I was very scared. I’ve never seen such a thing. They were all very big bearded men, they looked like monsters,” he said. “My parents weren’t with me and I was thinking about them, wondering what happened to them.”

Ahmed and the other boys were then moved to Badoush Prison outside the Daesh stronghold of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, where they were kept for 15 days. It was here that Ahmed noticed that every time the militants brought food, the boys would fall asleep immediately after they ate. There were, Ahmed believes, sleeping pills in the food.

The militants taught the boys Islamic prayers, instructed them in their hard-line interpretation of the Qur’an and forced them to say they had become Muslims.

“We were scared of saying that we were not Muslims because they would kill us,” he said.
Ahmed was among some 200 Yazidi boys sent to a two-month training camp in Tal Afar. Their days began with early morning prayer and military training exercises, followed by study of the Qur’an. They learned to shoot Kalashnikovs and pistols. On a large screen, they watched videos on how to use a suicide belt, throw a grenade, or behead a person.

“They were telling us if we were in a fight against the infidels ... we had to blow ourselves up and kill them all,” he said.

There was talk of sending the boys, who spoke a northern Kurdish dialect and knew little Arabic, to other Arabic-speaking countries to learn Arabic, study Islam and forget about their Yazidi parents.

“They were telling us, ‘You are not Yazidis anymore. You are one of us,’” Ahmed said.

“When you grow up, you will blow yourself up”

Akram Rasho Khalaf was only 7 when his town of Khidir Sheikh Sipa was overrun by the militants on Aug. 23, 2014. His family tried to flee, but the militants opened fire and Akram suffered shrapnel and bullet wounds to his abdomen and hand.

“They started to shoot at us. My mother fell and I was hit. These are the bullet marks,” he said, raising his T-shirt to show two large scars on his stomach. Akram was taken by ambulance to Mosul, seized earlier that summer by Daesh, where he underwent surgery.
“They separated me from my mother, my sister, my brother and my father,” he said, adding that he never heard from his parents again, though his mother is believed trapped in the western sector of Mosul still held by Daesh.

Akram fidgeted as he talked about the overwhelming hunger he felt while in captivity. Asked if he was scared, the boy, now 10, said he was too hungry to be afraid.

Eventually, he was brought to Raqqa, the Daesh group’s self-declared capital in Syria. There the militants would throw balls at the children’s heads, Akram said. If anyone cried, they were beaten. Those who didn’t cry were praised for being tough and told they would one day be suicide bombers.

“They were saying they are our friends, but the kids were scared to death,” Akram said, speaking to the AP in Kabarto Camp, near Dahuk, where he now lives with his uncle, two siblings and other relatives some 90 miles (150 kilometers) north of their home village.

“They were telling us, ‘When you grow up, you will blow yourself up, God willing,’ and some of the kids said, ‘We will not blow ourselves up,’” Akram said. “Then they asked us, ‘Which one of you wants to go to paradise?’ And the kids didn’t know what to say.”

“But they wanted all of us to blow ourselves up. They were saying, ‘You have to blow yourself up!’“

Training included sliding on their bellies through barricades of burning tires, jumping over obstacles and off roofs, the child said. Small for even his young age, Akram wasn’t strong enough to handle a gun, so he was forced to be a servant and was sold to various fighters.

Escape

Two years after Akram was taken captive, the boy’s uncle, Hasar Haji Hasan, received a photo on his Facebook page of his nephew dressed in black Islamic garb, along with an offer to smuggle him out of Raqqa for $10,500 — an increasingly common practice as Daesh militants seek to earn cash by returning the youngest of their captives for a price. The family borrowed the money from a relative in Germany, where there is a large Yazidi refugee community. Eventually the boy was smuggled out and taken by motorcycle to a Kurdish peshmerga checkpoint. He was reunited with what remains of his family on Nov. 29 — two years and three months after he was seized by the militants.

For Ahmed, escape came sooner. On May 4, 2015, nine months after their capture, Ahmed, his brother Amin and a cousin managed to slip from the militants’ sight at the military training camp in Tal Afar. Their cousin was soon recaptured, but the brothers hid in a mosque until nightfall, then fled with a small group of other escapees on foot.

“We were following the movement of the sun and continued walking at night,” he said. “We were very thirsty because we ran out of water and we could not find the safe road. We ran out of everything. We were almost dying.”

But fear of Daesh kept them going, and after a nine-day 55-mile (90-kilometer) trek they reached the Sinjar mountains, where Kurdish peshmerga forces rescued them.

“Hide the knives”

Akram’s uncle says his nephew has been deeply affected by his time in captivity, suffering nightmares, anxiety, sleeplessness and bedwetting. The boy’s brother, 8-year-old Raiid, and 5-year-old sister Jumana, rescued separately after ransom was paid, have similar problems.
“Sometimes they become very aggressive and they beat up other children or our children. They are not like other normal children. Their mental health is very bad,” he said.

Akram’s sleep is interrupted by the militants, who menace him in his dreams, the boy said.
“When I go to sleep I see Daesh in my dreams and they say, ‘Come,’” he said. “And I get very scared and I wake up and I can’t go back to sleep.”

Carl Gaede, an American clinical social worker and executive director of Tutapona, a US-based nonprofit specializing in war trauma, says these reactions are common among survivors of the horrors that people have experienced under Daesh rule.

“We’ve seen a number of the children acting out in violent ways and family members needing to hide the knives, hide dangerous items out of fear of how the children might use them because of what they’ve seen and participated in,” said Gaede, who along with his staff works with survivors of Daesh brutality in Esyan camp, where Ahmed lives with his family.

Ahmed sees a counselor, like many of the Yazidis living there. “He tries to restore my mind, to bring me back to how it was before Daesh,” the teen said of his counselor. “He tries to get this fear out of me. He tries his best.”

Ahmed fills his days now with school — English is his favorite subject — and running a small shop at the camp selling women’s and girls’ clothing and shoes.

Asked about his dreams for the future, Ahmed answers immediately. “When I grow up I will take my revenge against Daesh, against those infidels,” he said.

Akram, now a ball of energy on a tiny frame with an easy smile and a killer dimple, also has a ready response. Asked what he wants to do when he grows up, he declared: “Fight Daesh.”
 
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http://www.arabnews.com/node/1099136/middle-east

BAGHDAD: An Iraqi air force helicopter has been downed west of Mosul Saturday afternoon after coming under fire from the Daesh group, according to Iraq’s joint operations command.

The helicopter was hit while supporting Iraq’s mostly Shiite militia forces in an operation to retake villages still held by the militants in the sprawling desert to Mosul’s west, Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, the command’s spokesman, said in a statement. The source of the attack was ground fire, the pilot landed safely and there were no fatalities, he added.
The government-sanctioned Shiite militia forces known as the Popular Mobilization Units launched an operation to retake a small village just south of Sinjar on Friday.

Inside Mosul Iraqi forces backed by the US-led coalition are slowly closing in on a small cluster of neighborhoods in the city’s west held by the extremist group. The operation to retake Mosul was launched in October, the city’s east was declared liberated in January and Iraqi forces launched the operation to retake the west the following month.

The US-led coalition does not provide air cover for operation led by the Popular Mobilization Units.

The last time an Iraqi helicopter was shot down was in April, and the crash killed both pilots. In addition to coalition air support, Iraqi air force and army aircraft conduct regular strike operations over the city to support police and special forces units battling Daesh.
 
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Qassem al-Aaraji: the man who fought his own country for Iran's sake
May 20 2017 12:22 AM
520172002139596305045.jpg

al-Aaraji performing Shiite rituals
Mostapha Hassan

Since the ill-starred Khomeni revolution took place in 1979, the foremost aim of Iran rulers was devastating Iraq and seizing its resources.

The Mullahs achieved their long-time dream after the US invasion in 2003.

To reach such an aim, the Iranians crafted watertight plots, forged dirty alliances and exploited many personalities to work in its favor in Iraq.


One of those 'Iraqi' figures who worked for Iran is the incumbent minister of interior Qassem al-Aaraji.


He has deep-rooted fishy alliance with the Iranians. And he is keen on every occasion to declare his support to it and its militias, including Badr Organizations and IMIS.

Captive in Iran

Al-Aaraji is deeply tied to Iran. His remarks and stances are very indicative in this respect.

The reason for this seems because he spend a lot of time there in Ayatollah Muthari University where he got a BA in Accounting. He also received a Bachelor of Islamic Science from the Imam Kadhim College of Evening Studies in Iran.

He moved to Tehran shortly after the Khomeni uprising started.

At the time, he joined the ranks of the Iraqi opposition after the end of the Gulf War.

He was one of the disciples of the Shiite cleric Ahmed al-Khafagi, who is one of the founders of Badr Organization.

Khafagi was assassinated in 2014.

Yet, al-Aaraji was trained under the patronage of senior commanders of both Badr Organizations and IMIS including Hadi al-Aameri and Mahdi al-Muhandis.

Image1_520172001628924967206.png


Thereafter he joined Badr Organization and received training there 'to fight the Iraqi forces commanded by the late Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in the 1980s eight-year war.

While in captivity in Iran, he pledged allegiance to the Mullah regime.

In 1984, he was fighting against the Iranians, but he fell in captivity and was moved to Barandk camp, along with 700 captives.

While there, he joined Badr Organization which works for the regime in Iran.

Iran regime was exploiting the Iraqi soldiers who fell in captivity to its interest. He offered them to disavow Saddam regime. Who accepts from among them enjoyed 'special treatment' and was enlisted in the ranks of the terror militias fighting the Iraqi forces during the war.

According to sources, Aaraji's activities in Iran were mainly linked to the IRGC's mobilization forces, tasked with carrying out terror operations beyond borders.

As it is the case for all commanders of Iran-backed terror militias in Iraq, al-Aaraji is on good terms with the commander of the so-called Quds Foce Qassem Suleimani.

Undisputed loyalty

Al-Aaraji is seen by many as one of the stooges serving Iran agenda in the country.
He defends the Mullah regime both in words and action.

More than once he made remarks glorifying the Iranian regime and the 'Islamic revolution.
Moreover, he claims that Iran has made a positive role in Iraq since 2003.


Iran stood by the side of the Iraqis since the era of the despot Saddam, a video showed him as saying.
He added Tehran supported all the Iraqi government in the post-Saddam era.

Aaraji went on to say that 'nobody can deny the role of Iran in defending the Iraqis and the entire region in the face of ISIS and other terror groups.

He got in parliament, as a lawmaker for Wasset province, in its third term. And he is a member of the defense and security committee.

He represents Badr Bloc in the parliament.

Dangerous terrorist

The Iraqi incumbent top cop has a rich record of terror support.

He was arrested by US forces on January 17, 2007 and was listed as a dangerous terrorist by the US prison system KAW130.

He was released after 26 months in detention.

Al-Aaraji is a staunch advocate of the Iran-backed IMIS. He once was quoted as saying' if it were not for Iran, Baghdad would fall to ISIS.

During a televised debate, he appeared defending IMIS militia, telling the other guest that 'we have no militias. Those fighters are 'more honorable than you and your masters'.


I will not let you label IMIS as militias, he continued, adding 'you defend killers and criminals…you are not in position to attack those who fight for the honor of all Iraqis!

He also adopts an adamantly sectarian rhetoric. Another video showed him as refusing to accept a Sunni PM for Iraq.

If anybody of us says he accepts the appointment of a Sunni PM, I will tell him he is liar, the video showed him as saying.

Experts exclaim about the fact he is holding a key post in the Iraqi government despite the fact that he is a staunch supporter for Iran and its terror in the region.

The Iraqi government seems to be turning a blind eye to the proven record of terror for Aaraji, they added.

http://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en/st...an-who-fought-his-own-country-for-Iran-s-sake

The Baghdad Post is a an excellent media run by Iraqi patriots exposing the satanic Wilayat al-Faqih farsi Mullah filth in beloved Iraq and their demonic agenda and actions which will eventually be dealt with and combated successfully.





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6Ck4o6kJWg


At least 47 districts have been liberated in Mosul's right bank so far, Lt Gen Talib Shaghati, Commander of Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS) said on Saturday.

 
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.
Qassem al-Aaraji: the man who fought his own country for Iran's sake
May 20 2017 12:22 AM
520172002139596305045.jpg

al-Aaraji performing Shiite rituals
Mostapha Hassan

Since the ill-starred Khomeni revolution took place in 1979, the foremost aim of Iran rulers was devastating Iraq and seizing its resources.

The Mullahs achieved their long-time dream after the US invasion in 2003.

To reach such an aim, the Iranians crafted watertight plots, forged dirty alliances and exploited many personalities to work in its favor in Iraq.


One of those 'Iraqi' figures who worked for Iran is the incumbent minister of interior Qassem al-Aaraji.


He has deep-rooted fishy alliance with the Iranians. And he is keen on every occasion to declare his support to it and its militias, including Badr Organizations and IMIS.

Captive in Iran

Al-Aaraji is deeply tied to Iran. His remarks and stances are very indicative in this respect.

The reason for this seems because he spend a lot of time there in Ayatollah Muthari University where he got a BA in Accounting. He also received a Bachelor of Islamic Science from the Imam Kadhim College of Evening Studies in Iran.

He moved to Tehran shortly after the Khomeni uprising started.

At the time, he joined the ranks of the Iraqi opposition after the end of the Gulf War.

He was one of the disciples of the Shiite cleric Ahmed al-Khafagi, who is one of the founders of Badr Organization.

Khafagi was assassinated in 2014.

Yet, al-Aaraji was trained under the patronage of senior commanders of both Badr Organizations and IMIS including Hadi al-Aameri and Mahdi al-Muhandis.

Image1_520172001628924967206.png


Thereafter he joined Badr Organization and received training there 'to fight the Iraqi forces commanded by the late Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in the 1980s eight-year war.

While in captivity in Iran, he pledged allegiance to the Mullah regime.

In 1984, he was fighting against the Iranians, but he fell in captivity and was moved to Barandk camp, along with 700 captives.

While there, he joined Badr Organization which works for the regime in Iran.

Iran regime was exploiting the Iraqi soldiers who fell in captivity to its interest. He offered them to disavow Saddam regime. Who accepts from among them enjoyed 'special treatment' and was enlisted in the ranks of the terror militias fighting the Iraqi forces during the war.

According to sources, Aaraji's activities in Iran were mainly linked to the IRGC's mobilization forces, tasked with carrying out terror operations beyond borders.

As it is the case for all commanders of Iran-backed terror militias in Iraq, al-Aaraji is on good terms with the commander of the so-called Quds Foce Qassem Suleimani.

Undisputed loyalty

Al-Aaraji is seen by many as one of the stooges serving Iran agenda in the country.
He defends the Mullah regime both in words and action.

More than once he made remarks glorifying the Iranian regime and the 'Islamic revolution.
Moreover, he claims that Iran has made a positive role in Iraq since 2003.


Iran stood by the side of the Iraqis since the era of the despot Saddam, a video showed him as saying.
He added Tehran supported all the Iraqi government in the post-Saddam era.

Aaraji went on to say that 'nobody can deny the role of Iran in defending the Iraqis and the entire region in the face of ISIS and other terror groups.

He got in parliament, as a lawmaker for Wasset province, in its third term. And he is a member of the defense and security committee.

He represents Badr Bloc in the parliament.

Dangerous terrorist

The Iraqi incumbent top cop has a rich record of terror support.

He was arrested by US forces on January 17, 2007 and was listed as a dangerous terrorist by the US prison system KAW130.

He was released after 26 months in detention.

Al-Aaraji is a staunch advocate of the Iran-backed IMIS. He once was quoted as saying' if it were not for Iran, Baghdad would fall to ISIS.

During a televised debate, he appeared defending IMIS militia, telling the other guest that 'we have no militias. Those fighters are 'more honorable than you and your masters'.


I will not let you label IMIS as militias, he continued, adding 'you defend killers and criminals…you are not in position to attack those who fight for the honor of all Iraqis!

He also adopts an adamantly sectarian rhetoric. Another video showed him as refusing to accept a Sunni PM for Iraq.

If anybody of us says he accepts the appointment of a Sunni PM, I will tell him he is liar, the video showed him as saying.

Experts exclaim about the fact he is holding a key post in the Iraqi government despite the fact that he is a staunch supporter for Iran and its terror in the region.

The Iraqi government seems to be turning a blind eye to the proven record of terror for Aaraji, they added.

http://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en/st...an-who-fought-his-own-country-for-Iran-s-sake

The Baghdad Post is a an excellent media run by Iraqi patriots exposing the satanic Wilayat al-Faqih farsi Mullah filth in beloved Iraq and their demonic agenda and actions which will eventually be dealt with and combated successfully.





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6Ck4o6kJWg


At least 47 districts have been liberated in Mosul's right bank so far, Lt Gen Talib Shaghati, Commander of Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS) said on Saturday.

by looking at the site you will understand the Exact definition of but-hurt news agency
 
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by looking at the site you will understand the Exact definition of but-hurt news agency

Butthurt are those who cannot stand seeing the truth being exposed by Iraqi patriots who must be applauded for this excellent news agency and for reaching out to a larger audience by writing their news in English as well. Iraq has long been in need of such a news agency.

I guess this statement below by the leader of Iraq (Prime Minister Al-Abadi) is "butthurt" too.


 
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http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/iraqi-forces-take-center-of-qayrawan-district-in-mosul/824273

Pro-government fighters on Tuesday wrestled control of the center of al-Qayrawan district in western Mosul from Daesh terrorist group, according to an Iraqi army officer.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Army Captain Jabbar Hassan said the Hashd al-Shaabi fighters captured the area following an overnight offensive.

“Scores of Daesh militants were killed in the operation,” he said without giving an exact number of the casualties.

The pro-government fighters also captured two villages near the Qayrawan district, according to army officer Samir Dawood.

“More than 400 civilians have been evacuated from the area over the past hours,” he told Anadolu Agency.

The new development comes as part of a major offensive launched by the Iraqi army to dislodge Daesh from Mosul, which was overrun by the terrorist group in 2014.

Reporting by Ali Jawad and Hussein al-Amir; Writing by Mahmoud Barakat
 
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Congrats so called followers of Ahlul Bayt There is another rape case caught on video by an Iraqi journalist in Mosul.

P.S the journalist is not a Wahabi Takfiri or tooti frooti He is a Shia himself.

blob:http://projects.thestar.com/a237a5f3-4bab-41d3-99ef-da9a9c6fcd17

@Dawood Ibrahim @Khafee @Sharif al-Hijaz

@beast89 @Serpentine Please somehow defend this act too or blame this on ISIS and Saudi Arabia?

http://projects.thestar.com/iraq-torture-abuse-murder-war-crimes/index.html

If this is the true face of these Shia militias fighting in Iraq and Syria then I would pick Daesh everytime in a battle between them.
 
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