15 வயது முஸ்லீம் சிறுமியை தற்கொலைப்படையாக்கிய ஈராகிய இஸ்லாமிய பயங்கரவாதிகள்
The Girl Turned Into A Human Bomb
CBS Evening News Exclusive: Interview With 15-Year-Old Iraqi Girl Who Survived Being Strapped With Explosives
Fifteen-year-old Rania al Ambaki from Baquba says she was strapped with a vest of explosives by terrorists and turned into a human bomb. (CBS)
The Ruthless Terror Business
Al Qaeda has increased its recruitment of women, children, and the mentally disabled for suicide bombing missions. Elizabeth Palmer reports. | Share/Embed
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(CBS) Rania al Ambaki was handcuffed to a gate at an Iraq security checkpoint. She was a human bomb, CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reports.
Suspicious officers immobilized her, jammed cell phone signals that could detonate the explosives, then carefully removed her suicide vest.
She turned out to be just 15 years old, and her story is an increasingly common one.
She comes from Baquba, an al Qaeda hot spot just north of Baghdad. It's a recruiting ground for women suicide bombers who are responsible for much of the recent carnage in story=3220766>Iraq.
Last year, there were eight women bombers. So far this year, there have been 35. A CBS News crew traveled to Baquba to meet Rania in jail.
"I now thank God that I didn't get blown up," she said through a translator.
Rania told police she had no idea the vest was a bomb. Family members, including her husband, she said, had helped her put it on.
Police think they may have drugged her, and meant to blow her up by remote control.
Rania said through a translator: "They told me that it was a kind of medical vest for back pain."
Gen. Abdul Kareem Qalaf helped interrogate Rania. He said: "She has a low IQ and is a vulnerable teenage girl."
Why does there suddenly seem to be so many women suicide bombers?
Qalaf said through a translator: "Al Qaeda uses these people - the mentally ill, children and very young women. This shows al Qaeda is failing."
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Read more foreign news at the new World Watch blog.
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Al Qaeda is using women bombers - because it works. In a conservative Muslim society, they're less likely to be searched, and there's a shortage of female security agents to do the job.
As for Rania, she lived to tell a tale that helped police arrest her husband. But her aunt, the suspected ringleader, is still on the run. She's one of a new breed of Iraqi women turned into key players in the ruthless business of terrorism.
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