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Journalist Carroll asked to die by gun

For the first time since she returned to the United States in April, The Christian Science Monitor's Jill Carroll has described her chilling, 82-day experience as a hostage in Iraq.
/ Source: Reuters

Certain she would be murdered by the men who kidnapped her on a Baghdad street and fatally shot her translator, American journalist Jill Carroll begged her captors at one point to use a gun to end her life rather than a knife.

“Promise me you will use this gun to kill me by your own hand. I don’t want that knife, I don’t want the knife, use the gun,” Carroll remembered crying hysterically to the Iraqi man who was watching her with a 9mm pistol at his side.

For the first time since she returned to the United States in April, Carroll has described her chilling, 82-day experience as a hostage in Iraq.

The Christian Science Monitor, the newspaper for which Carroll reported from Baghdad and now works as an editor in Boston, published the first installment of her 11-part series on Sunday night on the newspaper’s Web site.

‘Jihad! Jihad! Jihad!’
Carroll, who was snatched on Jan. 7 after trying to interview a Sunni politician, described how a sunny Saturday morning turned deadly as a group of men pointed their pistols at her and killed her friend and translator, Alan Enwiya.

The men surrounded the 28-year-old reporter, shouted “Jihad! Jihad! Jihad!” and sped away on Baghdad’s main road, according to the account.

Carroll wrote she was later grilled about how many American reporters lived in Baghdad and accused of working with U.S. intelligence agents.

When Carroll asked her captors to shoot her instead of killing her with a knife, she said she had been held for six weeks. “They’d given me a new hijab (headscarf), a new name (Aisha), and tried to convert me to Islam,” she wrote.

Watching Oprah, playing with the kids
As days turned to months, Carroll, who speaks Arabic and moved to Iraq to fulfill a dream of being a foreign correspondent, said she was interrogated, but, at times, was given a remote control to a television set where she watched the Oprah Winfrey show. She said her captors also let her play with their children.

At one point, she said they served her from a platter of chicken and rice “that would have been fit for an honored guest.”

“We have no problem with you. Our problem is with your government,” her captors told her as they prepared to release tapes of the journalist wearing a headscarf and weeping.

When Carroll first returned to the United States, she described her captivity as a horrific ordeal in a cave-like room sealed off from the world. She said she was threatened many times by her captors, whom she described as “criminals at best.”

A final indignity
Just before her release, Carroll said she was forced by her captors to make a video in which she denounced the U.S. presence in Iraq and praised the militants fighting American forces there. Carroll later disavowed those comments.

Carroll’s parents and twin sister kept a public face on her ordeal through frequent, emotional appeals for her release on U.S. and Arabic television.

On Wednesday, the U.S. military said it arrested four Iraqis suspected of being involved in Carroll’s abduction.