Cubs of the Caliphate: rehabilitating
Islamic State's child fighters
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[March 08, 2018]
By Raya Jalabi
RAWANGA CAMP, Iraq (Reuters) - While
children who have been through war typically draw devastating pictures
of the violence they have suffered, few show themselves as the
perpetrators.
The suicide belts, car bombs and other explosives sketched again and
again by a 14-year-old boy newly arrived at this camp in northern Iraq
are the ones he built himself: used by Islamic State militants against
civilians and troops in Iraq and Syria.
One image depicted him killing a man with a spray of bullets, something
he said he did during three years as a child fighter forcibly
conscripted by Islamic State.
Kidnapped from his Yazidi homeland in northern Iraq, he said he got used
to the sound of bombs falling on Islamic State's de facto capital,
Raqqa, in Syria, as security forces closed in last year.
"Here's where I got shot fighting the SDF," said the boy, not named to
protect him from retribution, referring to the U.S.-backed rebel Syrian
Defense Forces and pointing out a bullet wound on his shin.
Giving him time to draw and talk about his experience is part of a
treatment program to help him move on and protect both him and others
from lasting damage.
Hundreds of children are estimated to have been used as fighters by
Islamic State, including boys who joined with their families or were
given up by them and the offspring of foreign fighters groomed from
birth to perpetuate its ideology.
Experts have warned that indoctrinated children, who began escaping the
clutches of Islamic State as its territory fractured last year, could
pose an ongoing threat to security, both regionally and in the West, if
they are not rehabilitated.
Treating Yazidi children, who were separated from their families and in
many cases orphaned, holds particular challenges.
PERSECUTED TWICE
There is little in the way of specialized care for them in Iraq, where
the minimum age of criminal responsibility is nine. The government has
detained and prosecuted dozens of children for their suspected IS
affiliation, according to a recent report by New York-based Human Rights
Watch.
Naif Jardo Qassim, a psychotherapist treating children at Rawanga
refugee camp near Dohuk emphasized that they are "victims and not
criminals," and should be treated as such.
Highlighting the scale of the task, Yazidi teacher Hoshyar Khodeida
Suleiman recounts the story of one of his students, a young boy reunited
with his family in the autumn.
A few days later, the boy's father woke up in the middle of the night to
find his son wielding a knife to his throat, confused about whether he
should kill his parents or himself.
"He was screaming that they were infidels and that he would rather die
than be one of them," Suleiman said.
When the militants overran Yazidi towns and villages in 2014, it killed
or enslaved more than 9,000 adults and children in what the United
Nations has called a genocidal campaign against a religious minority
labeled heretic by Islamic State.
It sold girls and women into slavery, marrying some off to fighters, and
trained many boys to join the ranks of what it called the Cubs of the
Caliphate, posting videos of them committing atrocities in the name of
its self-declared state.
Most of the children returned, not home, but to displacement camps in
northern Iraq, where they live with relatives – their parents either
missing or killed by the militants.
"Everything changed while they were gone," said Qassim. "That's if they
even remember anything from their lives before."
Adding to that instability is the weight of the traumas they have
endured.
"These children have seen their families killed, or were kidnapped,
beaten and brainwashed," he said. "In some cases, they witnessed
executions, were forced to kill or were raped, multiple times, for
years."
Qassim works for Yahad In-Unum, one of a handful of international NGOs
which has set up a children’s center in the camp, where children can
receive psychological treatment, ranging from talk to art therapy.
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Yazidi students are seen at school in the Sharya camp, in Duhok,
Iraq February 23, 2018. REUTERS/Ari Jalal
They also come to play, said Qassim, "and remember how to be
children again".
REMEMBERING
Qassim’s six-month-old center is currently treating 123 children, a
mix of girls and boys all under the age of 18, recently returned
from Islamic State-held territory.
"When they first come back from captivity, the children can often be
aggressive, violent, confused and angry," he said, adding that many
of the children were forced to forget their native Kurdish. "That
quickly dissolves into anxiety and deep depression, as the trauma
begins to settle in."
The center devises a treatment program for each child, which
involves both individual and group therapy sessions.
"We slowly work to undo the years of brainwashing they were
subjected to," said Qassim. "We want them to forget the last few
years and start again."
He said all the children he has treated were successfully
"de-indoctrinated", adding, "no child is beyond saving".
The relative novelty of so-called deradicalization programs means
opinion is divided over their effectiveness; Laila Ali, spokesperson
for UNICEF in Iraq which supports such services, says rehabilitation
is "absolutely possible".
Some children are harder to reach than others, particularly those
who have forgotten life before IS.
One 10-year-old boy was smuggled out of Syria just three and a half
weeks ago and has since been living with his uncle in the camp. Shy
at first, he became animated when describing his "accomplishments"
during his fighter training in Deir Ezzor, Syria and said he is not
sure his current life is better.
Qassim says he exhibits confusion about whether he should denounce
Islamic State's teachings. He and other children sneak off to pray
in the toilets, unconvinced they will not get in trouble with
Islamic State for shirking religious obligations.
Qassim says he is hopeful he will be back to normal soon.
Some face new humiliations on their return. "I had to move in with
my relatives because my parents said they would never accept me back
because of what I did," said one former fighter, now aged 15.
Qassim is the only psychotherapist at his center and the work takes
its toll. "It's very difficult to hear children tell you these
stories - of rape, of combat, of killings... In my life, I'd never
heard such horrors."
With little in the way of funds or a roadmap, some community members
have pitched in to help in their own ways.
Suleiman aims to rehabilitate Yazidi children at Sharya refugee camp
near Dohuk by "reconnecting them with their Yazidi faith", with an
emphasis on "humanity and human decency".
On a rainy afternoon in late February, they came to class in
traditional clothes he had given them: white dresses and scarves
with black and gold headbands for the girls; trousers, matching
waistcoat and red and white keffiyeh scarf for the boys.
"It's a simple thing," he said. "But the clothes are a reminder of
who they are and where they come from."
(Reporting by Raya Jalabi; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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