Published on 12:18 AM, August 23, 2016

Iraqi forces foil suicide bomb attack

Remove bomb vest from 12-yr-old 'IS boy' before he was able to detonate it

IS USES CHILD BOMBER IN HORRIFYING TACTIC: Iraqi security forces remove a suicide vest from a boy in Kirkuk on Sunday night. The would-be suicide bomber thought to be as young as 12 has told police he was kidnapped by masked men who placed an explosive vest on him. The boy was displaced from the IS-held city of Mosul by recent military operations in the area and arrived in Kirkuk a week ago, police said. Photo: Reuters

Iraqi security forces apprehended a teenager wearing a suicide belt before he was able to detonate it in the city of Kirkuk, security officials said yesterday.

The foiled attack late Sunday was one of a series of security incidents in Kirkuk and came a day after a child suicide bomber killed more than 50 people in Turkey.

"Police forces managed to stop a bomber thought to be as young as 12," Kirkuk police chief Brigadier General Khattab Omar Aref told reporters.

He said the boy was about to carry bomb attack on behalf of IS at a Shia place of worship in Kirkuk, an ethnically and religiously mixed city that lies 240 kilometres north of Baghdad.

Nighttime TV footage showed a boy holding his hands in the air as security forces removed the explosives belt from around his waist.

The video shows him appearing to burst into tears as he is captured by police. The explosives vest was later detonated in a controlled explosion, reports Independent.

New details have emerged suggesting the boy was kidnapped by masked men who placed the explosive vest on him.

The thwarted attack was one of four separate security incidents in Kirkuk over a few hours, including one in which a policeman shot a suicide bomber who tried to enter a Shia prayer hall.

"The police forces have managed to foil a terrorist operation that could have caused victims and led to a catastrophe for the province," Kirkuk Governor Najmeddin Karim told AFP.

The security situation has been tense lately in Kirkuk, which is under Kurdish security control but is also home to Turkmens, as well as Sunni and Shia Arabs.

Aref said the attackers involved in the latest string of incidents entered Kirkuk recently and came from Mosul, the last remaining major bastion of the Islamic State group.

Iraqi forces are currently conducting shaping operations on several fronts to tighten the noose on Mosul -- Iraq's second city -- and set the stage for an offensive.

The IS group, the most extreme organisation in modern jihad, has routinely used children to perpetrate crimes.

It provides young boys in its self-proclaimed caliphate military training from a very young age.

According to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the bomber who killed at least 54 people at a Kurdish wedding in the city of Gaziantep was aged 12 to 14.