Officials say Afghan children are being taken to Pakistanto study at religious schools in areascontrolled by the Taliban extremist group.Officials say each year there are at least three or four cases of childrenbeing illegally transported from Afghanistan to Pakistan.In Pakistan the children are taken to religious schools, called madrassas.Authorities say the goal is for the children to later return to Afghanistanand enforce the same severe version of Islam observed by the Taliban.The Taliban was removed from power in Afghanistanin 2001 by United States-led coalition forces.One Afghan counterterrorism officialspoke to the Associated Press about the issue.The officials said Afghan authorities have identified 26 madrassas in Pakistan.They are suspected of training future generations of Taliban members.In some cases, students are trained in carrying out suicide bombings.Police have stopped vehicles traveling from Afghanistan's eastern Ghazni provinceto Quetta, in Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan province.After searching the vans,police found groups of boys between the ages of four and 15.They were all being taken illegally to Pakistan to study at madrassas.Quetta is important to Afghanistan's Taliban.It is the capital of Pakistan's Baluchistan provinceand shares a border with Afghanistan.Many Taliban members graduated from madrassas there.It also is considered the headquarters of the Taliban leadership council,often called the "Quetta shura."Several of the 26 madrassas identified as Taliban training centers are in Quetta.One of the madrassas in Quetta is called Sheikh Abdul Hakim.Azizullah Mainkhail, a teacher at the madrassa told the Associated Pressthat some students there were from Afghanistan.However, he said the majority are Pakistanis from villages throughout Baluchistan.He denied any connection with the Taliban.Mohammed Musa Mahmoodi is with the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission.He said a number of issues have aided the movement of children from Afghanistan.These include war, poverty, insecurityand a lack of understanding by the parents of the dangers for their children.However sometimes parents say they want their children to study in Pakistan."Parents often agree to send their children but they don't know what is awaiting the child.Sometimes they are told they will be educatedor will get a good job and be looked after," said Mahmoodi. "But when they get there they are beaten, forced to work as cheap labor,or taken by Taliban as new recruits."Mohammed Naseer wanted his son, a nephewand several other children from his area to study the Quran,the Muslim holy book, in Quetta.His son Mohammed Yaseen is just 9 years old,but he said he was excited to be going to Quetta.His dream: "I want to be a mullah ."Naseer said his son had studied three years in a village schoolbut he still could not read or write in his native Pashto language.He said the village school offers English lessonsbut the teacher does not speak English.He also worries about the lack of quality Islamic schoolswhere his son can study Islam.So, he decided then to send his son to Pakistan.He put his son with 26 other children into the two vans.He gave his son a change of clothes and gave money to the mentaking his child to Pakistan "but only for transportation."These stories are common, but senior police official Fazlur Rahman Bustaniin Kabul said the movement of children is a dangerous business."Those involved in the transport of childrenare part of a dangerous network and it is a criminal act," said Bustani."It doesn't matter if the parents approve."