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Iraqi boys recount horrors of captivity, training by IS

KABARTO CAMP, Iraq (AP) - They made the captive children, weak from hunger, fight over a single tomato. Then the Islamic State militants told them that in paradise they could eat to their hearts delight, but they could only get there by blowing themselves up.

The lesson was part of the indoctrination inflicted by the militants on boys from Iraq's Yazidi religious minority after the extremist group overran the community's towns and villages in northern Iraq. The group forced hundreds of boys, some as young as 7 or 8, into training to become fighters and suicide bombers, infusing them with its murderous ideology.

Now boys who escaped captivity are living in camps for the displaced along with what is left of their families.

"Even here I'm still very afraid," said 17-year-old Ahmed Ameen Koro, who spoke to The Associated Press in the sprawling Esyan Camp in northern Iraq, where he now lives with his mother, sister and a brother, the only surviving members of his family. "I can't sleep properly because I see them in my dreams."

The militants stormed into the Yazidi heartland in the summer of 2014, killing tens of thousands of people and kidnapping thousands of women and girls to be used as sex slaves. The Yazidi minority's ancient faith is considered heretical by the Islamic extremists.

U.S.-backed Kurdish forces drove IS out of Sinjar in November 2015, but few Yazidis have returned, and an estimated 3,500 remain in IS captivity in Iraq and Syria, according to Human Rights Watch.

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"THEY LOOKED LIKE MONSTERS"

Ahmed's family tried to flee when the militants descended on their village, but IS fighters captured him, his 13-year-old brother Amin and four cousins.

The boys were taken to the IS-held town of Tal Afar, some 30 miles (50 kilometers) away, where they were kept in a boys' school along with dozens of other boys and teens. The adult men were taken away, leaving the women and girls.

"They chose and took the girls they liked," Ahmed recalled. "I remember the girls were crying, as well as the mothers. They were dragging these girls from the arms of their mothers."

"They were all very big bearded men, they looked like monsters," he said.

Ahmed was among some 200 Yazidi boys sent to a two-month training camp in Tal Afar. They studied the Quran and the militants' hard-line interpretation of Islam, and learned to shoot assault rifles and pistols. They watched videos on how to use a suicide belt, throw a grenade, or behead a person.

"They were telling us, 'You are not Yazidis anymore. You are one of us,'" Ahmed said.

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"WHEN YOU GROW UP, YOU WILL BLOW YOURSELF UP"

Akram Rasho Khalaf was only 7 when his town was overrun by the militants. His family tried to flee, but the militants opened fire and Akram suffered shrapnel and bullet wounds to his abdomen and hand. He was taken by ambulance to Mosul, seized earlier that summer by IS, where he underwent surgery. He never heard from his parents again.

Akram fidgeted as he talked about his captivity, saying he remembered being too hungry to be afraid.

Eventually, he was brought to Raqqa, Syria, the IS group's self-declared capital. There the militants would throw balls at the children's heads. If anyone cried, he was beaten. Those who didn't cry were praised, and told they would one day be suicide bombers.

"They were saying they are our friends, but the kids were scared to death," Akram said in Kabarto Camp, where he now lives with his uncle, two siblings and other relatives.

"They were telling us, 'When you grow up, you will blow yourself up, God willing,'" he said.

Training included sliding on their bellies through barricades of burning tires, jumping over obstacles and off roofs. Akram wasn't strong enough to handle a gun, so he was forced to be a servant.

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ESCAPE

Two years after Akram was taken captive, his uncle received a photo of his nephew dressed in black Islamic garb and an offer to smuggle him out of Raqqa for $10,500 - an increasingly common practice.

The family borrowed the money from a relative in Germany, and eventually the boy was smuggled out. He was reunited with what remains of his family on Nov. 29 - two years and three months after he was seized.

Ahmed escaped sooner. On May 4, 2015, nine months after their capture, Ahmed and his brother Amin sneaked away from the training camp in Tal Afar, hid in a mosque until nightfall, then fled with a small group of others on foot.

"We were very thirsty because we ran out of water," he said. "We were almost dying."

But fear kept them going, and after a nine-day, 55-mile (90-kilometer) trek they reached the Sinjar mountains, where Kurdish peshmerga forces rescued them.

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"HIDE THE KNIVES"

Akram's uncle says his nephew suffers nightmares, anxiety, sleeplessness and bedwetting. The boy's 8-year-old brother and 5-year-old sister, rescued separately after ransom was paid, have similar problems.

"Sometimes they become very aggressive and they beat up other children or our children," he said.

Carl Gaede, an American clinical social worker and executive director of Tutapona, a U.S.-based nonprofit specializing in war trauma, says these reactions are common among survivors.

"We've seen a number of the children acting out in violent ways and family members needing to hide the knives, hide dangerous items out of fear of how the children might use them," said Gaede, who works with survivors of IS brutality.

Ahmed sees a counselor, like many living in the camp, and fills his days now with school and running a small shop.

Asked about his dreams for the future, Ahmed answers immediately. "When I grow up I will take my revenge against Daesh, against those infidels."

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Associated Press writer Salar Salim contributed to this report from Irbil, Iraq.

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This undated militant photo shows Yazidi boy Akram Rasho Khalaf, while in Islamic State militant captivity in Raqqa, Syria. Now 10 years old, he recalls, "They were telling us, ‘When you grow up, you will blow yourself up, God willing,’ and some of the kids said, ‘We will not blow ourselves up,’” Akram said. “Then they asked us, ‘Which one of you wants to go to paradise?’ And the kids didn’t know what to say.” (militant photo via AP) The Associated Press
Akram Rasho Khalaf, 10, stands with other children at the Kabarto Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Friday, April 14, 2017. Akram had been captured, trained and sold into servitude by Islamic State militants. His sleep is interrupted by the militants, who menace him in his dreams. "When I go to sleep I see Daesh (Islamic State) in my dreams and they say, ‘Come,’” he said. "And I get very scared and I wake up and I can’t go back to sleep." (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Akram Rasho Khalaf, 10, shows scars from wounds sustained when he had been captured by Islamic State militants, in the Kabarto Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Friday, April 14, 2017. His family's town of Khidir Sheikh Sipa, northern Iraq, was overrun by the militants on Aug. 23, 2014. “They started to shoot at us. My mother fell and I was hit. These are the bullet marks.” (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Akram Rasho Khalaf, 10, sits for a photo at the Kaabarto Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Friday, April 14, 2017. The boy had been captured at the age of 7, trained and sold into servitude by Islamic State militants. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Akram Rasho Khalaf, 10, center left, plays with a soccer ball at Khabarto Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Friday, April 14, 2017. At the age of 7, he was captured by Islamic State militants who started to train him to be a suicide bomber. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, pauses during an interview in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. Ahmed was 14 when Islamic State militants stormed into the Yazidi heartland around the northern town of Sinjar in the summer of 2014. After his capture, militants started to train him and other youths to become suicide bombers. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, and his sister, Manal, sit together in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. Nine months after capture by Islamic State militants, Ahmed and his brother, Amin, managed to slip from the militants’ sight at the military training camp in Tal Afar. “We were following the movement of the sun and continued walking at night,” he said. “We were very thirsty because we ran out of water and we could not find the safe road. We ran out of everything. We were almost dying.” But fear of IS kept them going, and after a nine-day 55-mile (90-kilometer) trek they reached the Sinjar mountains, where Kurdish peshmerga forces rescued them. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, stands for a photo in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. Ahmed, who had ben captured and indoctrinated by Islamic State militants, sees a counselor, like many of the Yazidis living here. “He tries to restore my mind, to bring me back to how it was before Daesh (Islamic State),” the teen said of his counselor. “He tries to get this fear out of me. He tries his best.” (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, center, talks with other children after school in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. Ahmed was among some 200 Yazidi boys captured by Islamic State militants and sent to a two-month training camp in Tal Afar. Their days began with early morning prayer and military training exercises, followed by study of the Quran. They learned to shoot Kalashnikovs and pistols. On a large screen, they watched videos on how to use a suicide belt, throw a grenade, or behead a person. “They were telling us if we were in a fight against the infidels ... we had to blow ourselves up and kill them all,” he said. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, stands in the door of his family's tent in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. At the age of 14, he was captured and underwent training by Islamic State militants. Asked about his dreams for the future, Ahmed answers immediately. “When I grow up I will take my revenge against Daesh (Islamic State), against those infidels." (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
Ahmed Ameen Koro, 17, pauses during an interview in the Esyan Camp for internally displaced people in Dahuk, Iraq, on Thursday, April 13, 2017. “Even here I’m still very afraid,” he says after escaping an Islamic State militant training camp. ”I can’t sleep properly because I see them in my dreams.” (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) The Associated Press
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