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Thread: Six-year old Khidir Qader was kidnapped, tortured for 2 years by al Qaeda terrorists

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  1. #1
    Grand Count thehesbomb's Avatar
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    Six-year old Khidir Qader was kidnapped, tortured for 2 years by al Qaeda terrorists

    FALLUJA, Iraq (CNN) -- Like many young boys, Khidir loves playing with toy cars and wants to be a policeman like his father when he grows up. But it was his father's very job that caused the tiny child to suffer the unimaginable.
    Khidir and his father, Abdul Qader, recently talked to CNN about his ordeal.

    Khidir and his father, Abdul Qader, recently talked to CNN about his ordeal.

    Khidir was just 6 years old when he was savagely ripped away from his family, kidnapped by al Qaeda operatives in Iraq.

    "They beat me with a shovel, they pulled my teeth out with pliers, they would go like this and pull it," said Khidir, now 8, demonstrating with his hands. "And they would make me work on the farm gathering carrots."

    What followed was even more horrific, an ordeal that would last for two years in captivity. Khidir and his father spoke to CNN recently, more than half a year after his rescue by Iraqi police. Video Watch boy describe torture »

    "This is where they hammered a nail into my leg and then they pulled it out," he says, lifting up his pant leg to show a tiny wound.

    He says his captors also pulled out each of his tiny fingernails, broke both his arms, and beat him repeatedly on the side of the head with a shovel. He still suffers chronic headaches. He remembers them laughing as they inflicted the pain.

    "I would think about my mommy and daddy," he replies, when asked how he managed to get through the agony.

    His father, Abdul Qader, struggles for words. "When he tells me about how they would torture him, I can't tolerate it. I start crying," he says. "What hurts me the most is when they hammered a nail into his leg."

    The father, a police officer, was sleeping at the police station in Falluja when his son was kidnapped. It was too dangerous to go home regularly. Although Falluja was no longer controlled by insurgents, assassinations against police were common.

    "I woke up to the sound of a huge explosion ... and then I heard my name on the radio. I ran outside and they came to me saying your house was blown up," he says.

    "When the police patrol came back, they all started kissing and comforting me," he continues. "I was asking, 'What's going on? Where is my family?' They told me that they took my son. This was a disaster. I went mad that day, I wasn't normal, I was hysterical."

    Khidir's grandmother was at home with the family at the time.

    "The kidnappers climbed the fence and kicked in the door," she says."They were screaming for Abdul Qader. I told them he's not here. They called me a liar and said we want his son. His son was hiding behind me, clutching my clothes. I said this is not his son. They hit me on the back with a rifle and ripped him out of my arms."

    The last thing she remembers were his screams of "Granny, Granny!"

    The attackers rigged the house with explosives and demolished it before taking off with the 6-year-old. The boy's grandmother and seven other family members rushed out of the home before it exploded.

    "The kidnappers called me on the phone and demanded that some prisoners that we had be released or they would slit his throat," Khidir's father says. "But I said no to the release. I would not put killers back out on the street that would hurt other Muslims. So I thought to myself, 'Let my son be a martyr.' "

    He even held a secret funeral for his little boy. He didn't want to tell the rest of the family that he had refused the kidnappers' ultimatum, allowing them to hope that he was still alive.

    Last December, nearly two years later, police in Taji, about 45 (70 kilometers) away, received a tip that terrorists were holding kidnapped children.

    "We thought that it was just a tip to ambush us, but we considered the mission as a sacrifice," said Iraqi police Capt. Khalib Ali. "Either we find the children and free them or face the danger and take the risk.

    The tip led the Iraqi police to a rundown farm and a series of mud huts. Khidir's tiny body was twisted abnormally. And in another hut, they found another child. Two children are still believed to be with the kidnappers.

    Al Qaeda in Iraq has historically kidnapped children for money, to pressure officials, and even to use in terrorist attacks.

    For Khidir's father, it was as if his son had come back from the dead.

    "He didn't recognize his mother or his grandmother," Abdul Qader says. "But then he saw me in uniform and ran to me. I went flying toward him to hug him. People said be careful; both his arms are broken. So I held him from his waist, and he hugged me, kissed me, smelled me, and then broke into a smile."


    The father flips through old family photos -- all they were able to salvage from their destroyed home -- and notes some of the kidnappers are still at large. He still fears for his son's safety, but says he won't quit the police force.

    "Never, never," he says. "If I leave the police force, if others leave the force, who will protect us from the terrorists? We are the only ones."




    http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/...boy/index.html
    you think you're god's gift
    you're a liar...
    I wouldn't piss on you if you were on fire

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    Heartbreaking. I can't imagine what his father must have been going through. I think that his father is a hero for his behavior and decisions over the past couple of years--and his son is a hero for all that he has become, despite being tortured in such a way.

    This story has touched me very deeply. On one hand, I understand that the father did NOT lightly make the decisions that he made. When he said "let my son be a martyr" it was not done from laziness or misplaced loyalty to the religion/ideals that this martyrdom would have been for--it was for a hope of a better future in which these type of groups do not get away with kidnapping and torturing, when they're not rewarded for such deeds.

    I know that in my heart, I would probably sacrifice the world for my daughter, as would most parents, and probably as this father WANTED to do.

    All over the world, parents torture their children to death, or watch them be tortured for the sake of a cock. The apathy and general cruelty in the world is terrible, and while this story is not exactly a story of hope, or of sunny days and flower meadows, it somehow IS a story of hope in the mental and emotional torture this family faced, and yet still came out with this bravery and steadfastness. The boy has every reason to be irreparably damaged and yet he smiles. He recognized his father in his uniform and immediately leaped into his old life, which is more than most grown people can do after much less torture treatment.

    I can't express what I want to say so I'll stop. But thank you for posting this story.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by ScribbleMuse View Post
    Heartbreaking. I can't imagine what his father must have been going through. I think that his father is a hero for his behavior and decisions over the past couple of years--and his son is a hero for all that he has become, despite being tortured in such a way.

    This story has touched me very deeply. On one hand, I understand that the father did NOT lightly make the decisions that he made. When he said "let my son be a martyr" it was not done from laziness or misplaced loyalty to the religion/ideals that this martyrdom would have been for--it was for a hope of a better future in which these type of groups do not get away with kidnapping and torturing, when they're not rewarded for such deeds.

    I know that in my heart, I would probably sacrifice the world for my daughter, as would most parents, and probably as this father WANTED to do.

    All over the world, parents torture their children to death, or watch them be tortured for the sake of a cock. The apathy and general cruelty in the world is terrible, and while this story is not exactly a story of hope, or of sunny days and flower meadows, it somehow IS a story of hope in the mental and emotional torture this family faced, and yet still came out with this bravery and steadfastness. The boy has every reason to be irreparably damaged and yet he smiles. He recognized his father in his uniform and immediately leaped into his old life, which is more than most grown people can do after much less torture treatment.

    I can't express what I want to say so I'll stop. But thank you for posting this story.
    ScribbleMuse, I think that I can safely assume that you spoke for many of us. This story brought tears to my eyes, and a bit of hope as well. Even after that horrible ordeal he smiles, makes you hopeful that he can somehow overcome those two years of horror.

    I wish I can give this little boy a hug.

  4. #4
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    al Qaeda, such brave and noble warriors! What heroes they are to be able to batter an old lady in order to kidnap and torture a CHILD. What courage it took for them to pull out this 6yr old boys teeth, hit him with shovels, drive a nail into his little leg. And they even managed to break his arms!



    These pathetic, puss-filled butt-boils need to be eradicated.

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