Story highlights
Four suspected insurgents were trying to smuggle 41 children abroad, officials say
Police suspect the 41 children were going for suicide-bomber training
They have been returned to their families, the Interior Ministry says
It's not the first time police have caught children trying to be suicide bombers
Afghan police have intercepted 41 children whom insurgents were planning to use as suicide bombers, an Interior Ministry spokesman said Tuesday.
Four suspected insurgents were about to smuggle the children across the mountains into Pakistan from eastern Kunar province on Friday, said Sediq Seddiqi, the spokesman.
“We strongly believe that the children were being taken to Pakistan to be trained, brainwashed and sent back as Afghan enemies,” Seddiqi said.
The children are aged between 6 and 11, he said.
Police handed the children back to their families after they were rescued in the Watapur district of Kunar province, he said.
“The insurgents cheat poor and ordinary Afghans and take away their children,” Seddiqi said.
Afghan and foreign forces have arrested many would-be suicide bomber children in the past.
Earlier this month Afghan forces rearrested two children in Kandahar province on suspicion of planning to be suicide bombers.
The two were from a group of would-be suicide bombers who were pardoned by President Hamid Karzai last summer, according to a press statement from the Kandahar governor’s office.
They had gone to Quetta, Pakistan, to get more training before being sent back to Afghanistan for suicide attacks, the statement said.