How Islamic State is training child killers in doctrine of hate
At least 50 UK youngsters are growing up in the Isis ‘caliphate’, where education means watching videos of murders
 
                    
Researchers for Quilliam, a London counter-extremism thinktank,
 have investigated the way Isis recruits children and indoctrinates and 
trains them for jihad. As many as 50 children from the UK are growing up
 in Islamic State-controlled territory, with an estimated 30,000 foreign
 recruits, including more than 800 Britons, believed to have gone to 
Syria to fight.
The report, Children of Islamic State, has been endorsed by 
the UN and will be published on Wednesday in parliament. It was compiled
 through a study of propaganda released by Isis featuring children and 
liaising with trusted sources within the caliphate. The portrait painted
 is of a terrorist group eager to enlist children to help safeguard its 
future. Many are being trained as spies, preachers, soldiers, 
“executioners” and suicide bombers.
The authors state: “The organisation … focuses a large number of its 
efforts on indoctrinating children through an extremism-based education 
curriculum, and fostering them to become future terrorists. The current 
generation of fighters sees these children as better and more lethal 
fighters than themselves, because rather than being converted into 
radical ideologies they have been indoctrinated into these extreme 
values from birth, or a very young age.”
Not having been corrupted by living according to secular values, they
 are considered purer than adult fighters. “These children are saved 
from corruption,” states the study, “making them stronger than the 
current mujahideen [fighters] because they have a superior understanding
 of Islam from youth and from school curriculum and are better and more 
brutal fighters as they are trained in violence from a very young age”.
The foreign recruits represent a potentially significant 
strengthening of the group’s cohort of around 80,000 militants, 50,000 
in Syria and 30,000 in Iraq. An estimated 6 million men, women and children are said to be living within its self-styled Isis caliphate.
“The aim is to prepare a new, stronger, second generation of 
mujahideen, conditioned and taught to be a future resource for the 
group,” the report adds. “The area of most concern is that Islamic State
 is preparing its army by indoctrinating young children in its schools 
and normalising them to violence through witnessing public executions, 
watching Islamic State videos in media centres and giving children toy weapons to play with.”
The
 focus on youth bears similarities, according to the report, to the 
forced recruitment of child soldiers in Liberia in the 1990s, when 
Charles Taylor seized power in 1997 with a rebel army filled with children.
The authors conclude that Isis also appears to have studied the Nazi 
regime, which created the Hitler Youth to indoctrinate children. The UN 
has received credible but unverified reports about an Isis youth wing, 
Fityan al-Islam, meaning boys of Islam.
The authors also point to the precedent of the Baathist regime in Iraq,
 which in the late 1970s established the Futuwah (Youth Vanguard) 
movement with the most important Iraqi child soldier units known as 
Ashbal Saddam, or Saddam’s Lion Cubs, made up of boys aged 10 to 15.
Researchers for Quilliam found that children were used extensively in
 Isis propaganda – between 1 August last year and 9 February this year 
they identified a total of 254 events or statements featuring images of 
children – to help project the impression of state-building.
Isis also uses children to try to normalise brutality, with the group
 encouraging children to hold up decapitated heads or play football with
 them. In the past six months Islamic State propaganda has depicted 12 
child killers. A
 macabre recent video showed a four-year-old British boy apparently 
detonating a car bomb, killing four alleged spies trapped in the 
vehicle.
Recruitment of children into Isis frequently involves coercion, 
according to the report, with abduction being a favoured method. The UN Assistance Mission for Iraq
 estimates that Isis has abducted between 800 and 900 children between 
the ages of nine and 15. From August 2014 to June 2015, hundreds of 
boys, including Yazidis and Turkmens, were forcibly taken from their 
families in Nineveh and sent to training centres, where boys as young as
 eight were taught the Qur’an, the use of weapons and combat tactics.

 
 
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