The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the armed wing of Fateh movement, denied the Israeli security service allegations that the Brigades have dispatched a 14-year-old suicide bomber from Balata refugee camp in Nablus.  The chid was arrested by the Israeli intelligence and was released few hours later.

{mosimage}The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the armed wing of Fateh movement, denied the Israeli security service allegations that the Brigades have dispatched a 14-year-old suicide bomber from Balata refugee camp in Nablus. 

The brigades released a statement after Israeli media claimed that the arrested child is a suicide bomber, and said that the army forced the child to say that the brigades dispatched him to carry a bombing.  Also, the brigades added that it probed the incident, and found out that the soldiers forced the child to accuse certain figures of collaborating with the Israeli occupation.

The brigades affirmed that it has no relation whatsoever with the incident, and called on the Palestinian, Arab and International media to expose the Israeli plots which aim to destroy the reputation of the Palestinian resistance.

Israeli online daily Ynetnews reported that the brigades forced the child to write his will and video-taped him with weapons and the Quran. 

“After the child was released, he headed to his relatives and asked them to help him avoid carrying the bombing”, according to the Ynetnews.

The Israeli security services claims that resistance groups have recruited a number of youth lately to carry out attack against Israeli targets, and added that in spite the relative calm, resistance factions are still planning to carry attacks against Israel.

Israeli Soldiers arrest a 14-year-old, allegedly would-be suicide bomber

The Israeli security service said on Wednesday morning that they have arrested on Tuesday, a 14-year-old boy from the West Bank city of Nablus suspected of planning to carry out a suicide bombing in Israel.

The boy did not have any explosives or weapons when arrested.

Security officers claimed that the boy said during questioning that his father attempted to motivate him to become a suicide bomber in coordination with the Aqsa Martyr Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah.

The Shin Bet, the Israeli Public Security Service, also claimed that the boy was video-taped holding a rifle vowing that he will carry out an attack.

According to the Shin Bet the boy claimed that Jamal Al-Tirawi, one of the prominent Aqsa Martyr Brigades leaders was among those who attempted to motivate him to carry out the attack.