A kiss for his father before 'martyrdom': Chilling moment ISIS 'jihadi cub', 11, says goodbye before blowing himself up in a truck loaded with explosives
This is the
 disturbing moment a 11-year-old boy kneeled down to kiss his father's 
hand before blowing himself up in a truck laden with explosives. 
Footage of the child jihadi, identified as Abu Imara al Omri, was posted last month by ISIS supporters, who claimed the boy was used to help take the village of Ghazl near Aleppo, Syria from forces loyal to president Bashar al-Assad.
Al-Omri is seen toting a gun and gazing wistfully into the fields, before he is given a prep talk by another ISIS militant.
The 
youngster and his father then inspect the fortified truck, which would 
be packed with explosives, and the boy is taught how to ignite and drive
 the truck.
The final part shows young Abu, sitting inside the truck, kissing his father's hand as a blessing ahead of the suicide mission.
Daesh are increasingly using Vehicle Borne Improvised Explosive Device (VBIED) attacks against Assad's troops in Syria. 
ISIS
 propaganda has long boasted about raising the next generation of 
jihadists, calling them the 'cubs of the caliphate'. In a recent 
publication of Dabiq, their monthly English language magazine, the 
extremist group encourages mothers to sacrifice their sons for the 
caliphate. 
'As for 
you, O mother of lion cubs. ... And what will make you know what the 
mother of lion cubs is? She is the teacher of generations and the 
producer of men,' the article reads.
A
 new study published in the CTC Sentinel shows that child soldiers are 
treated no differently from adult militants under ISIS rule. 
Researchers
 have analysed the case of Omri and 88 other children in the past 13 
months and found that 39% of them died detonating a vehicle born IED 
device. Most of the children are from Syria and 33% were killed as foot 
soldiers.   
Some
 4% killed themselves while committing mass casualty attacks against 
civilians, and 6% died as propagandists embedded with brigades.
An
 emerging ISIS tactic is also to employ children to carry so-called 
'plunging attacks', a military operation in which a group of fighters 
attack an enemy position before blowing themselves up. 
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