Journalist Carroll finally freed
Twin sister is awakened by her joyful phone call
CAIRO AND BAGHDAD Katie Carroll went from a deep sleep to instantly awake when she saw the Iraq country code on her caller ID.
She grabbed the phone. It was 5:45 a.m. and the ringing heralded the news about her twin sister, Jill, who had been held hostage in Iraq for nearly three months. "Katie, it's me," said the voice on the other end of the line. "I'm free."
It was Jill herself, safe after 82 days.
"Then she burst into tears and I did, too," says Katie.
Journalist Jill Carroll was freed in Baghdad Thursday ending a period of captivity marked by an enormous global outpouring of support and calls for her release.
"I'm just really grateful. The overwhelming emotion is gratitude. I am glad this day has arrived and thank whatever forces, divine and otherwise, that helped bring about this day," says Jill.
On Jan. 7, Monitor freelancer Carroll traveled to interview Sunni Arab politician Adnan al-Dulaimi in Baghdad's western Adil neighborhood. He was not in his office, and, after waiting some 20 minutes, Carroll and her Iraqi driver and interpreter left.
After traveling about 300 yards, they were attacked by gunmen. Carroll was seized, and her interpreter, Allan Eniwya, was killed.
Thursday, Carroll's captors simply drove her to Amariyah, stopped the car, pointed her in the direction of the Iraqi Islamic Party office about 12:20 p.m. local time and then drove off.
Carroll, who was on assignment for the Christian Science Monitor when she was kidnapped, gave a short interview to Baghdad TV, which is owned by the IIP, before being transported to the Green Zone by the U.S. military.
Carroll said that for most of her ordeal she was kept in a darkened room which she later described as a "cave."
"I really don't know where I was. The room had a window but the glass you know, you can't see," she said, making a motion with her hand as if the window was blocked, "and you couldn't hear any sound, and so I would sit in the room.
"If I had to take a shower I walked, you know, 2 feet, to the next door to take a shower or go to the bathroom and come back." From time to time, she says, she had contact with Iraqi women and children in the house, which she found comforting.
She was only allowed to watch television and read a newspaper once and had little information about what was going on in the world at large.
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