BAGHDAD - Iraqi police publicly questioned a teenage girl after she was allegedly caught wearing an explosives belt, parading her in front of reporters and pressing her to confess she was planning a suicide bombing.

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©AP Photo/Iraqi Police, HO
In this photo released by the Iraqi Police on Monday, Aug. 25, 2008, police appear to remove the outer clothing of a girl who they suspected of being a suicide bomber seen handcuffed to railings in a street in Baqouba, Iraq, on Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008 according to police. Iraqi police presented a teenage girl caught wearing an explosives vest to reporters on Monday, prodding her in the presence of the media to confess to plans to stage a suicide bombing. But the girl appeared confused and denied the allegation, saying that she never intended to carry out the attack and wanted to remove the vest. The circumstances of her arrest remained unclear. U.S. officials said she had turned herself in, while local police said she was caught after arousing suspicion


Police distributed videos of the arrest and public interrogation to the media on Monday, a day after they were made.

The girl gave her first name as Rania and said she was born in 1993. She appeared confused in the questioning, giving conflicting answers about whether she knew two women who put the vest packed with 33 pounds of explosives on her.

In the video of the arrest, a policeman standing next to the teenager could be heard saying that when she was picked up, she was initially unable to talk because she had been given drugs.

She denied under questioning that she planned to carry out an attack, saying she had been instructed to remove the vest when she got home.

The arrest heightened concern about a rise in suicide bombings by women. The number of female bombers has more than tripled from eight in 2007 to 29 this year, according to U.S. military officials.

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©AP Photo/Iraqi Police, HO

The arrest video begins with the girl standing on a street in the city of Baqouba, capital of the volatile province of Diyala and a stronghold of al-Qaida in Iraq. She is shown with her arms behind her back, cuffed to a metal structure with police surrounding her.

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©AP Photo/Iraqi Police, HO

At some point, a policeman partially removes her brightly colored, flowered robe and subsequent frames show her with her arms bare and chest partially exposed, wearing a white vest. Another picture shows a two-sided vest with pockets in both front and back filled with explosives.

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©AP Photo/Iraqi Police, HO



Comment: Are all the Iraqi police officers in the habit of undressing females that appear suspicious? And then we make the observation that the pictures or the CNN video, do not show the explosives on the vest the female is wearing, we see them in a separate picture when off the females' body.



The girl is then shown standing in a room, wrapped in a black cloak, her dark brown hair dyed a lighter shade and surrounded by several police officers.

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©AP Photo/Iraqi Police, HO

During the public interrogation, reporters from local and foreign media stood behind cameras but did not ask the suspect any questions.



Comment: One wonders why that might be, and whether they were instructed not to ask any questions.



In the interrogation, she gives conflicting answers about whether she knew the women who gave her the vest.

"I swear to Allah that I do not know them. They were strangers," she is heard saying initially. But later she says "one of the women's names was maybe Fadhila and the other was called Widad."

When pressed about whether she knew the woman she then replied: "Yes."

Police asked if she intended to blow herself up.

"No, no, they put it on me and told me to take it off at home," she said. "They did not tell me to blow myself up."

A policeman then asks: "If so, why didn't you disconnect" the detonator?

The girl says: "I did not disconnect it (because) maybe it fell off me."


Comment: This implies that the female was in control of the detonator, while other "similar circumstances" show that that's not usually the case.



The circumstances of the girl's arrest remained unclear. U.S. officials said she had turned herself in, while local police said she was caught after arousing suspicion.



Comment: Hmm... one of the two forgot their lines, it seems.



Her exchange with police offered a rare glimpse at a teenager allegedly recruited by insurgents.

An Iraqi police officer said the girl came from a family of al-Qaida in Iraq supporters in Baqouba and that her father had carried out a suicide bombing. The officer said a relative is suspected of having recruited her. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.

He said the girl led them back to the area of Baqouba where she was given the explosives, and that they found a second bomb belt there. But that the apartment was empty. He said the girl's mother and sister were arrested.

Some female bombers may have been motivated by revenge. U.S. commanders believe al-Qaida in Iraq is increasingly seeking to exploit women who are unable to deal with the grief of losing husbands, children and others to the violence.



Comment: Yes, we heard the revenge excuse before, and answered it:
Consider the claim of Iraqi puppet president Talabani that the perpetrators are motivated by "revenge" and want to "show that they are still able to stop the march of history and of our people toward reconciliation." Revenge against whom exactly? Ordinary innocent Iraqi Muslims, both Sunni and Shia, who hate the American occupation of their country as much as anyone?

Islamic "terrorists" in Iraq, both "al-qaeda" and others have made it clear that their grievance is primarily against the 150,000 US troops that are currently illegally occupying Iraq. How do we explain then why an Islamic terrorist organisation in Iraq would use the indiscriminate murder of Iraqi civilians as a viable way to achieve their aim of expelling the foreign occupying forces? Clearly the ONLY result of such attacks is to bolster the US government's claim that it must remain in Iraq to fight the terrorists "over there" rather than be forced to fight them "over here". Obviously we are dealing with truly demonically possessed people or some arm of the US, British or Israeli governments and military is covertly ordering the attacks in order to justify the continued foreign occupation of Iraq.


Many Iraqi women wear long robes, ideal for covering bulky suicide vests, and Iraqi policemen hesitate to pat them down at checkpoints because of cultural taboos.

The military said that in Diyala, some 200 female volunteers recruited by the U.S.-backed group Daughters of Iraq are helping search women at checkpoints. Diyala has been one of the most violent areas in Iraq, even as the rest of the country witnessed a significant drop in attacks.

Associated Press Writer Bushra Juhi contributed to this report.