http://edition.cnn.com/2013/03/14/world/asia/pakistan-child-bombers/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
 
Police: Kids young as 8 used as bombers in Pakistan
By Saima Mohsin and Shaan Khan, CNN
March 14, 2013 -- Updated 1207 GMT (2007 HKT)
        
CNN.com

Pakistani police with young children suspected of planting bombs, in Quetta on 
March 13, 2013.

(CNN) -- A separatist group fighting the Pakistani government for years has 
deployed a new weapon in its arsenal, police said: child bombers.

Police in the southwestern Balochistan province say they have arrested a group 
of children as young as 8 that the United Baloch Army has been using to carry 
out attacks.

"All the children belong to extremely poor and down-trodden families," officer 
Zubair Mehmood told a crowded news conference Wednesday.

The militant group paid them $25 to $50 to drop off packages carrying bombs 
with timers, he said.

Police said the militant group used children because they seldom arouse 
suspicion.

Largest but poorest

For years, militants in Balochistan, a province rich in natural gas, have been 
fighting for self-rule.

They complain that the government has paid little attention to them and their 
economic needs.

While it's the largest province in Pakistan, it's the poorest in per capita 
income.

And for needy families, $25 to $50 (2,450 to 4,900 rupees) can go a long way.

'The children have confessed'

Authorities rounded up 11 children, as young as 8 and no older than 15, during 
a raid near the provincial capital, Quetta.

Eight adult members of the group fled during the raid.

"The children have confessed to more than a dozen bombings," Mehmood said.

One of the suspects confessed to a January 10 blast that left 11 people dead 
and 67 wounded.

In the attack, a bomb was left near a busy market.

Some attacks have targeted other populated areas while others have targeted 
routes used by security forces.

In some cases, the bombs were placed inside trash containers on deserted roads 
-- possibly as a scare tactic, police say.

Not without precedent

In 2009, Pakistani and U.S. officials alleged that a top Taliban leader in 
Pakistan was buying and selling children for suicide bombings.

Pakistan's military released a video showing children going through exercises 
in training for their attacks.

Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud then sold the children to other Taliban 
officials for $6,000 to $12,000, Pakistani military officials said.

Mehsud was killed in an apparent U.S. drone strike in August 2009.

Since then, there have been other sporadic cases.

In 2011, a 9-year-old girl who says she was kidnapped by militants in Pakistan 
and told to be a suicide bomber.
© 2013 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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