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Drugged girl, 15, a reluctant bomb martyr



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Published Date: 30 August 2008
RANIA is only 15, but in the past week the softly-spoken Iraqi girl has been drugged and strapped with explosives, before being arrested and thrown into a detention centre.
Now she finds herself at the heart of a propaganda war waged by the Iraqi security forces against the al-Qaeda militants who tried to use her as a suicide bomber.

Police arrested the teenager on Sunday in Iraq's violent Diyala province, where t
he Sunni militants are waging a bitter campaign against US and Iraqi forces.

She was wearing a vest packed with explosives when she was stopped by a local patrol in the provincial capital, Baquba. Initial reports said she had turned herself in, although police later said she was searched and they found the vest.

US military officials described her as an "unwilling" suicide bomber, as did the girl herself in a television interview.

Rania's ordeal is far from over. Wise to the potential publicity gold-mine she could be as a poster-girl for al-Qaeda's callous tactics, police have paraded her on television.

If Rania is to be believed, her profile matches that of other female suicide bombers in Iraq. Her father and brother both disappeared in 2006, she says, at the height of Iraq's vicious sectarian conflict. Their bodies turned up weeks later.

Analysts say many female suicide bombers are motivated by a thirst for revenge for family killed. But Rania says she never wanted to be a martyr. Then, staring into the distance, she recounts how she was nearly blown to pieces.

"My husband took me to see some of his relatives I'd not seen before. I stayed the night … Then, in the morning, they brought me breakfast with apricot juice. It tasted funny, so I asked what was in it. They told me 'nothing, just drink'." Police said when they arrested her, she seemed drugged by a sedative. "I was feeling dizzy and sick for days," she says.

After breakfast, an older woman who claimed to be a cousin started to put the vest on her, Rania said. She protested, but they told her not to worry. She must just go to a busy local market, where they would meet her. She was suspicious but they were very persuasive.

At a security checkpoint, a Sunni Arab neighbourhood patrol was suspicious of her long robe and searched her, finding the explosive vest.

"I never intended to blow myself up. When stopped at the checkpoint, I wanted to turn myself in, but I was afraid," she says. "Nobody told me how to use this vest. I don't know if they meant to blow me up by remote control. I just don't know."

Her capture – or rescue – is clearly a victory for US and Iraqi security forces in the propaganda war. It has shown an al-Qaeda that looks vulnerable, less competent and increasingly resorting to desperate tactics. Police are seeking her husband.

"The fact he's not shown up to help me yet shows he must have something to hide," she said.





The full article contains 513 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 August 2008 10:34 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Iraq
 
1

Matt there,

somewhere 30/08/2008 01:07:11
Hmmm. I am sure this must be against the teachings in the Koran. Is al-Qaeda, in reality, an anti-Islamic movement? Using Islamic followers as expendable delivery systems?
2

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 30/08/2008 03:51:06
A loving man, her husband. I wonder how old he is, she's only 15.
Sounds like her in-laws really like her!!
3

Douglas,

Bathgate 30/08/2008 08:37:48
#1 Matt there: There's nothing to choose between many major religions of the world. It's made up as we go along with "the word" being manipulated as required.
We'd be unlikely to use the potions and remedies from an ancient Greek or Roman medical text to treat ailments in this day and age.
Why then do so many insist on swallowing whole the antique ramblings of long gone vested interests and put it forward as the word of some notional super being with a somewhat bipolar attitude to the health and wellbeing of it's followers?
It's always been and always will be about power and money.
4

Dougie - Edinburgh,

30/08/2008 10:04:15
Sounds like she needs a divorce lawyer
5

P·K ,

30/08/2008 13:00:52
What else can you expect from blood thirsty coward terrorists? Drugging, brainwashing, preying on innocent children and getting as many civilians kill as possible!
6

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 31/08/2008 02:16:21
This from the same ilk that the Scottish Palestinian Support Movement supports.For them, anything goes as long as it is against others. The loudest squeals on the planet when some small indignity is visited on them though.How many Americans, United Nations, British troops or Israelis (or any one else and civilians for that matter)use children,as suicide bombers? All the excuses under the sun cannot defeat the truth about terrorist methods or excuse them.
7

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 31/08/2008 02:16:43
This from the same ilk that the Scottish Palestinian Support Movement supports.For them, anything goes as long as it is against others. The loudest squeals on the planet when some small indignity is visited on them though.How many Americans, United Nations, British troops or Israelis (or any one else and civilians for that matter)use children,as suicide bombers? All the excuses under the sun cannot defeat the truth about terrorist methods or excuse them.
8

,

31/08/2008 03:14:30
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
9

P·K ,

31/08/2008 03:15:50
Dragonhead

Good post.
10

Fanling,

Hong Kong 31/08/2008 04:20:37
No change then. This poor girl, like others before her, clearly had no choice. Internal Islamist blackmail. These people are truly the scum of the earth. They have no conscience and no real human purpose. Only a vaguely sick agenda. Their world is hate-filled and has no other reason for being. I loathe them and their sick ideology. I wish them the worst of all worlds.
11

Postmark-55,

China, 31/08/2008 10:55:35
As sad and as sick as this is as to what lengths these militants go to, I can't help but wonder if this would be happening if the US and the UK weren't there.
The militants haven't got the manpower nor the firepower to combat and defeat the Americans and Brits so they resort to the dirtiest tactics that they can and will stop at nothing to further their cause.
It would be in the best interest of everybody if we had full troop withdrawal, for this is more than likely going to keep happening until the troops pull out.
To hell with pride now, let common sense prevail and let Iraq get back to 'normal'.
12

P·K ,

31/08/2008 17:17:49
Poor miserably coward who has to resort to press automated post removal button to delete post above. The truth hurts!
13

Fanling,

Hong Kong 01/09/2008 00:46:25
#11 Postmark-55
"I can't help but wonder if this would be happening if the US and the UK weren't there."

While that is a valid conjecture, you seem to forget that these murderers have had an agenda stretching way back beyond the Iraq and Afghanistan of today. Their cause is inbuilt according to their tainted scriptures. (WTC in Feb 1993 ring any bells?)

"Full troop withdrawal" would of course be great for our guys who must be wondering why the hell they were sent there in the first place. But theirs is not to reason why. Bush and Blair are the reason why. Bush had an oil-related agenda and puppy-dog Blair did the dog obedience thing, dragging the rest of the EU with him. Both have blood on their hands. The newly catholicised Blair will never escape the fact, no matter how many Hail Marys he cons his conscience with.







14

57Nomad,

california 03/09/2008 00:54:52
#13 Fanling

Fanling said:

""Full troop withdrawal" would of course be great for our guys who must be wondering why the hell they were sent there in the first place. But theirs is not to reason why. Bush and Blair are the reason why."

You conjecture that they must wonder why they are there in the first place. I think you are mistaken. They are there because the former rulers of that country, the Taleban, hosted Osama bin Laden for years and accommodated his numerous terrorist training camps, making the Taleban government complicitous in his actions. One of those actions was the 9/11 attacks on the US.

The US asked the Afghan government, then under control of the Taleban, after the attacks, to arrest and deliver Osama to US custody. They refused to do so and refused to help in any way. This is a casus belli in every sense of the word. They attacked us first. We aren't going to absorb that kind of punishment and turn the other cheek. The Taleban would still be in power in Afghanistan had they arrested Osama when we asked them to.

Our guys know why they are there. They are there to capture of kill the people responsible for attacking us and we will stay there until the job is done. As for full troop withdrawal, lets start with the foreign jihadis who comprise the "new" Taleban to withdraw to their bases in Pakistan and stay there.
15

Dan,

Englandshire 08/09/2008 16:33:16
Thank you 57Nomad - now could you explain the reasons for being in Iraq which is what I believe Fanling was referring to.

Personally I suspect the invasion of Iraq was a case of doing the right thing for the wrong reasons and in probably the wrong way - to wit: The removal of Saddam Hussain and the Ba'athist regime, unfortunately, the side effects of the cure seem worse than the disease.

That said, this could still be seen as the post op phase. Still, one way or another it has to get better, I mean, could it get worse?
16

,

08/09/2008 16:40:55
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: D

 

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