Boy Gives Chilling Details Of How ISIS Massacred Children With Armpit Hair

    Ahmed Aslef was just 10 years old
    when he was lined up with hundreds of other Yazidi children outside the Iraqi
    village of Kocho in front of the heavily armed jihadi fighters of Islamic State
    (Isis). The IS (Daesh) militants ordered the children to raise their arms and
    then killed those with armpit hair.
    Ahmed’s two young sisters were
    sold as slaves along with other family members in the cities of Mosul and Raqqa
    as IS spread across northern Iraq at the end of 2014. Since the Kocho massacre,
    survivors have claimed as many as 800 people were killed with boys as young as
    12 among the dead. Ahmed was spared but was recruited into the IS youth wing
    that has become known as the Caliphate cubs.

    A year on and Ahmed, now 11, is
    living in a safe house in Stuttgart, Germany, along with around 70 Yazidi women
    and children. He travelled to Germany as part of a refugee project run specifically
    for women and children who have escaped from IS. His mother has remained in
    Iraq to await news of his father and older brothers who remain missing and
    could still be held by IS, but are more likely among the many hundreds of dead
    whose remains have yet to be identified.
    “With Daesh, I didn’t go to
    school with girls. I didn’t learn maths. I went to a place with lots of other
    children. We learned how to use weapons. We were around 60 or 70 boys – no
    girls were allowed,” he told IBTimes UK in an exclusive interview.
    “I was a very good boy. We
    learned to take weapons apart and put them back together again, and how to load
    them. We learned how to throw grenades very far away. And we ran a lot for a
    long time.”
    Ahmed was kept in captivity with
    his family for nine months in various locations inside Iraq and Syria, as the
    family were sold multiple times. While in captivity, he said his family were
    confined to a single room and allowed to leave only to go to the toilet.
    He said his friends at the cub
    camps were from many different countries, including Morocco, Afghanistan,
    Algeria, Tunisia, Jordan and Germany. “We were all together every day and
    we all wore a special uniform like the older men,” he said.
    IS has taken control of most of
    the schools within its territory and has changed the curriculum. Experts say
    that in terms of the way terrorist groups use children and the techniques of
    indoctrination, the methods of IS have been unprecedented in their scale.
    “I have been studying
    non-state terrorism for 20 years and I have never seen such a system towards
    indoctrination that I have seen with Isis,” said John Horgan, at the
    Georgia State University Global Studies Institute.
    Ahmed said the first task of the
    young cubs was the recitation and memorisation of the Quran, followed by
    physical training and light weapons training, and then by specialist training.
    He proudly recalled how he knew how to a fire a rifle and spoke fondly of his fellow
    pupils.
    His main teacher, he said, was
    “an old man and very cross all the time” and he described witnessing
    a number of deaths. It appears the most extreme violence he was forced to
    witness was in Tal Afar, in Iraq, where he spent some time in captivity.

    “One man, from Tal Afar, he
    was a very bad man. I was in Tal Afar, and there were lots of boys from my
    village Kocho, but also other boys and we were altogether. There were many
    Shiite men there, as well as Turkmen and Daesh killed all the men in Tal
    Afar,” he said.

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