Hostage Jill Carroll

  • #81
jubie said:
Great Link Jeana, thanks!


She did go over as a peace activist so I'm sure she still has some sense of pity for the way many children and women are living but I don't get the feeling all that language was her own. Hopefully once back in the US and with her family we'll hear the truth.



Jubie


Of course, the talking heads are saying "Stockholm syndrome," but I think she was already in that mindset before she went. After all, why else would she be there? Its not Disneyland! We're at war for crying out loud!
 
  • #82
Jeana (DP) said:
Of course, the talking heads are saying "Stockholm syndrome," but I think she was already in that mindset before she went. After all, why else would she be there? Its not Disneyland! We're at war for crying out loud!


I hear you. I get the feeling she's not in a rush to leave. If they treated her 'so well' then how come she's so fragile all of a sudden to take flight home!!!!
 
  • #83
>Of course, the talking heads are saying "Stockholm syndrome," but I think she was already in that mindset before she went<


I agree. She already was sympathetic to them before she was kidnapped. Perhaps after being their guests for the past 3 months her attitude has changed. Then again some people never learn. I think we will soon find out.

If she was pressured into saying what she said in the pre-release interview once home she will say so. It's likely that she may have agreed to this pseudo kidnapping and lived to regret that she did so. She's lucky to have escaped with her head still attached to her body. I've always had a strong suspicion that Nicholas Berg started out the same way and things went sour very quickly for him.

Since they couldn't get any $$$ or have their demands met perhaps they figured at least they could squeeze a little bit of propaganda out of her before letting her go. I still think that things were heating up over there and they didn't want to get caught with her. She was now a liability and a hot potato. I can't get over the fact that she made it out alive. I was sure she was going to meet a bad end like the other peace-activist American hostage that was recently found murdered. Very very lucky girl. I hope she realizes just how lucky, kisses the American soil she lands on and spends the rest of her life in the loving arms of her family.

Sherlockmom
 
  • #84
I hope this is true.

csmonitor.com


Jill Carroll forced to make propaganda video as price of freedom

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

CAIRO - The night before journalist Jill Carroll's release, her captors said they had one final demand as the price of her freedom: She would have to make a video praising her captors and attacking the United States, according to Jim Carroll. In a long phone conversation with his daughter on Friday, Mr. Carroll says that Jill was "under her captor's control."

Ms. Carroll had been their captive for three months and even the smallest details of her life - what she ate and when, what she wore, when she could speak - were at her captors' whim. They had murdered her friend and colleague Allan Enwiya, "she had been taught to fear them," he says. And before making one last video the day before her release, she was told that they had already killed another American hostage.


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That video appeared Thursday on a jihadist website that carries videos of beheadings and attacks on American forces. In it, Carroll told her father she felt compelled to make statements strongly critical of President Bush and his policy in Iraq.

Her remarks are now making the rounds of the Internet, attracting heavy criticism from conservative bloggers and commentators.

In fact, Carroll did what many hostage experts and past captives would have urged her to do: Give the men who held the power of life and death over her what they wanted.

"You'll pretty much say anything to stay alive because you expect people will understand these aren't your words," says Micah Garen, a journalist and author who was held captive by a Shiite militia in southern Iraq for 10 days in August 2004. "Words that are coerced are not worth dying over."

Shortly before her release, her captors - who refer to themselves as the Revenge Brigade - also told her they had infiltrated the US diplomatic compound in Baghdad, and she would be killed if she went there or cooperated with the American authorities. It was a threat she took seriously in her first few hours of freedom.

Carroll worked at the Wall Street Journal's Washington office in early 2002 when that paper's reporterDaniel Pearl was abducted and beheaded in Pakistan. "Many of her colleagues knew him and it was very emotional in the office,'' Jill told her father. "She had that memory in the back of her head while she was being threatened."

In making their last video, Mr. Carroll says her captors "obviously wanted maximum propaganda value in the US. After listening to them for three months she already knew exactly what they wanted her to say, so she gave it to them with appropriate acting to make it look convincing."

Jill Carroll will undoubtedly speak for herself once she's had time to recover from her ordeal and spend time with her family. But her friends and colleagues say she made it clear that she's no friend to those who kidnap or harm civilians.

Those who encountered Carroll in a professional context repeatedly praised her fairness and compassion, as demonstrated by some of the thousands of letters the Monitor has received in her support.

"Her professionalism and objectivity were unparalleled within the media community," Capt. Patrick Kerr, a Marine public affairs officer who got to know Carroll last December, when she spent a month with a Marine unit in Western Iraq, said in an e-mail. "I saw her in Husaybah, on the Syrian border, in early December shortly before I returned to the States. Aside from being very personable and down-to-earth, what really struck me was Jill's bravery. She seemed to fit right in with the marines and Iraqi security forces," he wrote in January.

The Monitor's editor, Richard Bergenheim, says that "none of us - except perhaps her personal friends and family - know what Jill's views are about the war in Iraq. But we do know that they did not color her reporting for the Monitor. She covered a wide spectrum of people in Iraq and that is part of what made her reporting valuable."

On the evening of March 29, her captors brought her written questions in Arabic, and asked her to translate them into English for the video. Though they promised her freedom in exchange for cooperating, she didn't believe them, as she'd been promised freedom many times in the past, she told her father.

[...]
 
  • #85
Comment from Jill Carroll. I noticed she's lost the hijab too

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=adQhqFjL82yM&refer=top_world_news

Freed U.S. Journalist Carroll Says Video Comments Were Coerced

April 1 (Bloomberg) -- Jill Carroll, the American journalist who was kidnapped in Iraq and held for 82 days, said her captors forced her to make a video calling for U.S. troops to be pulled out of Iraq.

``They told me they would let me go if I cooperated,'' Carroll wrote in a statement issued today by her employer, the Christian Science Monitor. ``I was living in a threatening environment, under their control and wanted to go home alive. I agreed.''

In the nine-minute video made before her release, Carroll, 28, said her captors were good people fighting an honorable battle. She said President George W. Bush knew the war was based on lies and should remove U.S. troops immediately. In her statement today, Carroll said those are not her views.

In an interview immediately after her release with Baghdad Television, a local channel run by the Sunni Muslim Iraqi Islamic Party, Carroll said she was not threatened by her captors. She contradicted that account as well today.

``Fearing retribution from my captors, I did not speak freely,'' Carroll said in today's statement. ``In fact, I was threatened many times.''
[…]

http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=9f3bf3cd-46d4-450c-a667-c06e433412bf&k=53023
Canadian Press
Published: Saturday, April 01, 2006
Article tools


RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany (AP) - Former hostage Jill Carroll disavowed statements she made during captivity in Iraq and shortly after her release, saying Saturday she had been repeatedly threatened.

In a video, recorded before she was freed and posted by her captors on an Islamist website, Carroll spoke out against the U.S. military presence in Iraq. But Carroll said the recording was made under threat. Her editor said three men were pointing guns at her at the time.

"During my last night in captivity, my captors forced me to participate in a propaganda video," she said in a statement read by her editor in Boston.

"They told me I would be released if I co-operated. I was living in a threatening environment, under their control and wanted to go home alive."

"So I agreed,"

"Things that I was forced to say while captive are now being taken by some as an accurate reflection of my personal views. They are not."

Carroll arrived in Germany on Saturday on a U.S. military transport plane on her way back to the United States. The Islamic headscarf she wore as a hostage was gone and she wore jeans and camouflage.
[…]
 
  • #86
Gee.. I feel pretty silly right now. I was wrong! That happens so rarely. :blushing:
 
  • #87
>Gee.. I feel pretty silly right now. I was wrong! That happens so rarely.
Don't feel silly. There were enough of the fake kidnappings to make it natural to be a bit skeptical. I still have alot of unanswered questions. And we'll see what she continues to say while she makes the talk-show circuit rounds.

I have read her pre-kidnapping writings and they seemed a bit sympathetic to the other side. Perhaps her experiences in Iraq changed her mind about some things. This is one case where I will be very happy to have been completely wrong about someone. But I will wait and see if she continues to write the same types of things she wrote pre-kidnap. I also read that a close friend said she intends to go back to Iraq. Hmmmmm.....

Sherlockmom
 
  • #88
  • #89
Well, I am glad she is home now for her families sake. My sympathies are and were with them...not her.
 
  • #90
I'll bet anything she is clamming up now, after calling a press conference and being quite talkative right away, because someone told her to save it and write a book. Dunno if that's good or bad, lol, but I'll bet that has happened. Everyone does it, anymore. And while she was generally sympathetic to the Iraqis, she went over as a reporter, not a peace activist.
 
  • #91
Reporter's family issues public thanks

BOSTON -- The family of the American journalist held captive in Iraq for 82 days issued a public thank-you Sunday to everyone who helped win her release.
 
  • #92
A thank-you from Jill Carroll's family

*snipped* Jill's friends and family, who have been so supportive, and the millions of people around the world who prayed for Jill's release, should take great comfort in knowing that their prayers - and ours - have been answered.

In gratitude,
Jim, Mary Beth, and Katie Carroll

click on the link for The family's full statement (published in the Monitor today as a letter to the editor).
 
  • #93
I didn't see this posted anywhere. The Jill Carroll story is an excellent series, worth the read!


Jill Carroll, a freelance reporter for The Christian Science Monitor, was kidnapped by Sunni Muslim insurgents in Baghdad on Jan. 7, 2006.
Over the next 82 days, she was shuttled blindfolded among at least six safe houses and had closer contact with Sunni insurgents than any American who has lived to tell the tale.

She cooked with the women. She played with the children. She was locked away in rooms to the sound of cocking guns.

Deprived of control over the smallest aspect of existence, she feared for her life every day.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0814/p01s01-woiq.html
 

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