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Jill Carroll: The Mujahedeen Interview: Video. (Transcript by ABC News : Insurgents Justify Release of Jill Carroll in Web Tape): ABC News has found a video on an insurgent Web site showing U.S. reporter Jill Carroll before she was released by her captors in Iraq. The circumstances surrounding the video are unclear and it is equally unclear whether Carroll was under duress during the taping. Excerpt: Voice: Why didn't they (the American Army or CIA) save you? It reads like she did what she had to do to get out of there alive. (What would you have done?) News.com Australia completes the translation: At the end of the tape, her interrogator read out a statement in Arabic. "The mujahideen in the land of the two rivers announce the liberation of the journalist Jill Carroll ... after the US forces and the CIA failed to find her making their ineptitude obvious to the whole world," he said. WaPo: 'Like Falling Off a Cliff For 3 Months.' Reporter Ellen Knickmeyer in Baghdad talked to Carroll. It begins, Jill Carroll wondered from day to day whether she would grow old or die a hostage. The Post has also posted video of a Baghdad TV interview with Carroll just after her release, on this story page: Journalist Jill Carroll Freed By Her Captors in Baghdad. Updated 11:16 a.m. Report: Carroll Threatened Before Release. AP: (Christian Science Monitor editor Richard Bergenheim) said Friday that Carroll's parents, who spoke to her about the video, told him it was "conducted under duress." "What emerged was that they actually started filming this tape the night before and then there was a power outage. Jill had been told the questions, asked to translate them from Arabic into English," he told ABC's "Good Morning America." "When you're making a video and having to recite certain things with three men with machine guns standing over you, you're probably going to say exactly what you're told to say," Bergenheim added. Early days: The most-linked blogs of September 2000. Beebo was countring by handback then. Robot Wisdom was #1, with 44 links. Interesting: * There are no political blogs on the list—they hadn’t been invented yet. Actually, I got the impression that many bloggers got a bit shirty when political blogs started up, and started getting popular—politics (and especially right-wing politics) wasn’t what the blog-powered future was supposed to be about. Blogs were supposed to be personal, thoughtful, witty, sincere, not brash and combative. Kottke was #2, Megnut #11. |
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