, five young boys and one little girl chant confidently while waving their fingers in the air — ISIS-style.
They can be heard saying: "We will stand on the heads of the apostates and crush them one-by-one.
"By the will of Allah, Islamic State caliphate remains."
Kids born to wives and fighters of the terror cult, which was defeated in Syria and Iraq, are being radicalised at increasingly younger ages, as they're largely left to fend for themselves in refugee camps throughout Syria.
The broadcaster obtained the shocking video by jihadist monitoring service Jihadoschope, after it had been shared on pro-ISIS Telegram channels.
Raphael Gluck, founding partner of Jihadoscope, told Fox News: "During the height of the ISIS caliphate, there were literally thousands of children being radicalised by ISIS.
"Dubbed 'cubs of the caliphate', many of these boys and young teens would often appear in segments focusing on training camps where children were readied for combat.
"And now there is severe infighting in the camp, with a very local element loyal to ISIS.
"The women also made note (in video footage) that they are raising the 'cubs', the next generation of ISIS fighters."
ISIS FLAG RAISED It comes days after footage emerged showing women and kids raising the ISIS flag at the al-Hawl refugee camp, also known as al-Hol, where Brit Shamima Begum was living after fleeing the terror group.
In that video, which was posted last Monday, a group of women and kids cheer as a young boy scales a lamp post and unfurls the black ISIS flag.
The flag-raising footage was circulated among ISIS fanatics with the message: “This is not the end but the beginning, because our mothers and sisters know how to grow cubs to become fearless lions.”
A group of black burqa-clad women, videoed beside an ISIS flag, said: "We are living in terrible conditions. We see them (non-believers) walking around freely in their (infidel) ways... We are longing to return to the land of (the Caliphate)."
Separately, women in the camp have been vowing vengeance in the name of the terror group.
Currently the camp in northern Syria is home to more than 75,000 people which is run by the Syrian Democratic Forces and houses thousands of ISIS women and children.
Women and kids stand around and watch as the ISIS flag flies above them The ISIS flag can clearly be seen flying from a lamp post The camp is located in northern Syria, near the border with Turkey
Women and kids raise ISIS flag at Shamima Begum’s camp RELEASED FROM CAMP About 800 people, thought to have once been members of ISIS, were released from the camp last month after Kurdish officials ruled they were no longer a security risk.
One of the women released at the time, Safaa Mumen, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation: “I am happy to be released but I hope that the [Islamic] State is back, that it will rule us back again.
“The Islamic State will remain and it will even extend.”
The notorious al-Hawl refugee camp has grown in size in recent months due to the collapse of ISIS with millions trying to flee the area.
It had been home to Shamima Begum , 19, the ISIS bride who fled from Britain to join the terror group, who is now living in the al-Roj camp.
Begum had fled the death cult as coalition forces closed in on its last stronghold in Baghuz , northern Syria.
She had hoped to escape the squalor of the camp and be repatriated back to Britain but the Home Office revoked her British citizenship leaving her stuck in the camp.
An estimated 75,000 people are currently living in the camp Credit: AFP or licensors The al-Hawl camp is currently home to thousands of former ISIS members Credit: Getty - Contributor Shamima Begum had her British citizenship revoked by the Home Office Credit: BBC Thousands people are living at al-Hawl refugee camp in northern Syria Credit: niqash.org A number of British citizens are living in the camp Credit: AFP or licensors Local authorities are concerned European countries will stop their nationals returning home from the camps Credit: AFP or licensors The camp is full of refugees as well as displaced ISIS supporters. File image Credit: AFP or licensors We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368. You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502. We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.