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Journalist Jill Carroll Freed By Her Captors in Baghdad

Just after noon Thursday, Tariq al-Hashimi, secretary general of the Iraqi Islamic Party, called The Washington Post's Baghdad bureau to say that Carroll had been released by "unknown people."

"I have sent armored cars to bring her to the [party] headquarters," he said. "She requested me to talk to you and inform you directly and will be here within half an hour. Will you come here? She is okay. She is safe. She is more or less scared. I told her to calm down and we would take care of her."


Jim Carroll talks to reporters outside his Chapel Hill, N.C., home after learning that his daughter was free.
Jim Carroll talks to reporters outside his Chapel Hill, N.C., home after learning that his daughter was free. (By Sara D. Davis -- Associated Press)
VIDEO | In an interview, Carroll says her captors treated her well and "never hit me, never even threatened to hit me."

Upon her arrival at party headquarters about 1 p.m., party officials asked Carroll, clad in a gray-and-blue scarf and traditional robe, to sit for an interview that they said would be solely for their records.

The interview was broadcast about two hours later on Baghdad TV, the party's satellite station. Carroll said she did not know where she had been held captive nor why her kidnappers decided to release her.

"I don't know what happened," she said in the interview, which was rebroadcast around the world. "They just came to me and said, 'Okay, we're letting you go now.' "

She declined to describe her captivity in detail but said she had been fed well and had access to showers. She said that she rarely received news from the outside world and that the lack of freedom and the uncertainty were hard to bear.

"It was difficult, because I didn't -- I didn't know what would happen to me," she said.

After leaving the party office, Carroll met with U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who in a news conference Thursday afternoon thanked the Iraqi Islamic Party and all Iraqi politicians who had lobbied for her release. The United States did not make any agreement with Carroll's captors or pay any ransom, he said.

In a statement on its Web site, the Monitor said neither the paper nor Carroll's family had negotiated her release or paid a ransom.

"Furthermore, we have no information that would lead us to believe that any other party negotiated Jill's release or paid a ransom," the statement said.

David Cook, the Washington bureau chief for the Monitor, said he learned of Carroll's release when Jim Carroll called his cellphone at 6:10 a.m.

"Frankly, when I saw it, I thought, 'Oh, some reporter must be bothering Jim.' Because I'm the one who's supposed to chase the reporters away," Cook said later. "And then he told me what was happening, and it was wonderful. It was just stunning."

The identity of Carroll's captors was never fully clear. She appeared in three videos delivered to satellite television networks in the region. In one that aired in January, a little-known group calling itself the Vengeance Brigades threatened to kill Carroll within 72 hours unless all female prisoners held by U.S. forces in Iraq were released. Later that month, five female detainees were freed, a move U.S. military officials said was the result of a standard review of their cases.

Carroll was last seen Feb. 9, telling supporters in footage first broadcast on a Kuwaiti television station that time to win her release was running out. Her captors imposed a Feb. 26 deadline for their demands to be met.

In a final video released Thursday, Carroll was shown speaking positively about her captivity and the mujaheddin, Arabic for holy warriors, who she said were holding her.

Correspondent Ellen Knickmeyer and special correspondents Bassam Sebti and Naseer Nouri in Baghdad and staff writer Debbi Wilgoren in Washington contributed to this report.


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