Orang Islam make anak2 ingusan buat jadi bom bunuh diri dlm rangka jihad di 
jalan auloh.

Islam itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe....


Children coerced by Taliban to attack 
Jon Boone May 19, 2011
Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/children-coerced-by-taliban-to-attack-20110518-1et7o.html#ixzz1MmXgZ4ZD


KABUL: The Taliban are recruiting a growing number of children as  suicide 
bombers as NATO steps up its war against the insurgents. In some  of the 
country's most restive provinces, the Taliban are resorting to  threats, 
inducement and deceit in order to send children to their deaths  against US and 
Afghan targets. 

A 14-year-old boy has explained how he came close to  blowing himself up at a 
US 
military base two weeks ago. The Taliban gave  Noor Mohammad a simple choice - 
either they would cut off his hand for  stealing or he could redeem himself and 
bring glory on his family by  becoming a suicide bomber.
Held in Taliban custody in a different village from his  parents, after 
allegedly stealing mobile phones during a wedding party  in his village, the 
boy 
went for the second option. He was soon being  given basic lessons in how to 
use 
a gun, with which he would shoot the  guards at a nearby US military base in 
Ghazni, a violent south-eastern  province
He was also fitted with a suicide vest that covered his torso with  explosives. 
He was told that when inside the base he should touch two  trailing wires 
together, killing himself and as many American and Afghan  soldiers as 
possible. 
Having kitted the soon-to-be martyr out in his   outfit, the insurgents took 
photos and sent him on his way. 

A tactic pioneered by al-Qaeda but almost unheard of in  Afghanistan until 
2005, 
suicide bombing is becoming more popular with  insurgents trying to meet the 
greatly intensified NATO campaign with  their own surge of violence.
In one recent case a 12-year-old boy in Barmal district  in Paktika province, 
which borders Pakistan, killed four civilians and  wounded many more when he 
detonated a vest full of explosives in a  bazaar.
''They are relying more and more on children,'' said  Nader Nadery, from the 
country's Independent Human Rights Commission,  who thought the Taliban were 
struggling to recruit enough adults. ''When  somebody runs out of one tool they 
go to use the second one.''
Noor Mohammad,  who was interviewed at a children's  prison in Kabul on 
Tuesday, 
is awaiting trial after surrendering to the  Americans rather than going 
through 
with the attack.
He says he was left by his Taliban handlers to walk the  last few kilometres to 
the base in Andar district two weeks ago. Instead  he sat down and thought 
about 
his predicament. ''It is a sin to kill  yourself and to kill others,'' he 
decided. ''So I took off the vest and  threw it away.''
Surrendering proved tricky as the guards he had been  supposed to kill were 
slow 
to raise the alert and he was questioned only  after sleeping outside the camp 
for a night.
He later led the Americans to the village where the  Taliban members lived, 
identifying a house where the Americans recovered  weapons and explosives. Two 
Taliban from the village were also killed  during a shootout after he 
identified 
them, the boy said. He knows he  will never be able to go back home and will 
probably never see his  family again.
Not all bombers are coerced. Some are tricked, like a  group of four children 
who were recently arrested after travelling alone  across the border from 
Pakistan into Afghanistan.
Lutfullah Mashal, the spokesman for the National  Directorate of Security, said 
his agency's informants had raised the  alarm the four were on their way. The 
boys had confessed during  questioning, saying they believed only American 
soldiers would die and  they would escape unscathed.
Suicide bombing has also developed a sinister glamour  among the youth of  
Pakistan's tribal areas. A video in which children  enact a suicide bombing 
circulated widely in February, sparking public  alarm at how jihad appears to 
have reached the playground.
It also seems to have reached the Kabul juvenile  detention centre.  ''When I 
told my cellmates I refused to do a suicide  attack, none of them could 
understand why I didn't do it,'' Noor  Mohammad said.

Guardian News & Media

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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