Posted on 03/05/2005 5:24:34 PM PST by saquin
THE Italian hostage who was freed by her captors in Iraq only to be wounded by friendly American gunfire, returned to Rome yesterday and gave friends a brief, anguished glimpse of the suffering that she had endured.
Giuliana Sgrena, a 56-year-old journalist, was in visible pain as she was helped out of the private jet that had brought her home.
The journey that began with the joy of her release had been brought to a juddering halt when American soldiers opened fire on the car taking her to Baghdad airport, killing the Italian intelligence officer who had negotiated her freedom.
Before she boarded an ambulance for a Rome hospital where doctors were waiting to treat her fractured collarbone, Sgrena, who works for the left-wing Il Manifesto newspaper, said of her month-long ordeal: The most difficult moment was when I saw die in my arms the man who had saved me.
It was a sombre homecoming. The shots that killed Nicola Calipari, 50, a member of SISMI, the Italian military intelligence service, who threw himself across Sgrena to shield her, wounded two other officers, and triggered mutual recriminations between the United States and one of its most loyal allies in Iraq.
Sgrenas release was further overshadowed by reports in Italian newspapers that the government of Silvio Berlusconi, the prime minister, had agreed to pay a ransom of between $6m (£3.2m) and $8m. When two relief workers, Simona Torretta and Simona Pari, were freed last year, intelligence sources said the ransom paid was $5m.
Sgrenas ordeal began when kidnappers stopped her vehicle on February 4 outside a mosque near An-Nahrein University in Baghdad, where she had been interviewing refugees from the war-ravaged city of Falluja.
As Berlusconi announced that negotiations with unspecified contacts had begun, a video released by her captors showed her making a tearful appeal. Help me, help, she said. My life depends on you. Pressure the Italian government into withdrawing its troops.
Calipari was the key to Italys efforts on her behalf. From an office on the American base at Camp Victory, close to Baghdad airport, he sought out mediators to establish contact with the kidnappers. However, he was careful to keep his American hosts in the dark as the two allies pursue different strategies in such cases.
As a member of the American Delta Force pointed out: The Italians negotiate, theyre ready to pay a ransom. As far as were concerned, its absolutely out of the question.
One of Caliparis channels was an assembly of religious leaders. He travelled regularly to Abu Dhabi for talks that covered the ransom, humanitarian aid convoys and medical care in Italy for wounded Iraqis.
The breakthrough came on Thursday when a mediator fulfilled his promise to supply Calipari with a video of Sgrena. It showed her looking more relaxed, her hair tidy as she stood in front of a pile of fruit and a copy of the Koran.
For Calipari, his mission was almost complete. Its going well, were bringing her home, he told his superiors in a call to Rome. I dont know when yet, but well manage.
The next evening Sgrena was freed on the outskirts of Baghdad where a team headed by Calipari drove her away. Al-Jazeera, the Arab satellite television network, broke the news of her release and broadcast the last video.
That rainy, windy night, three cars moved through Baghdad escorting Sgrena to the airport where a Falcon jet sent by Berlusconi was standing by to fly her home.
Just before 9pm, the vehicles came to Checkpoint 504-Camp Victory, manned by troops of the US Third Infantry Division. Reports yesterday conflicted on precisely what happened next.
According to Sgrena herself, a rain of fire was unleashed at the Italians as she was talking to Calipari: We werent going very fast, considering. The driver didnt even manage to explain that we were Italians.
We thought the danger was over after my release to the Italians but all of a sudden there was this shoot-out, we were hit by a barrage of bullets, she said last night.
Calipari was updating her about news in Italy since her capture. He leaned over me, probably to protect me, and then he slumped down, and I saw he was dead, she said.
Sgrenas boyfriend, Pier Scolari, claimed yesterday that both the American and Italian authorities had been alerted to the groups passage. They had already passed through several control points when a bright light illuminated it, Scolari said. They fired at her. The Americans stopped the cars which were carrying Giuliana, they fired 300 to 400 bullets and they killed a man, without any reason.
The Third Division gave a different account, saying troops had fired at a speeding car whose driver had refused to stop at a checkpoint. The soldiers had tried hand and arm signals and had flashed white lights and fired warning shots.
The State Department in Washington laid the blame squarely on the Italians. An official said they had not given any news of Sgrenas release to the American embassy in Baghdad, or to US military commanders.
President George W Bush telephoned Berlusconi late at night to promise a thorough investigation. The Italians have launched their own inquiry.
War zone. $*it happens.
6 to 8 mil can buy a whole lot of weapons to use against our guys and the Iraqi citizens.
"Sgrenas release was further overshadowed by reports in Italian newspapers that the government of Silvio Berlusconi, the prime minister, had agreed to pay a ransom of between $6m (£3.2m) and $8m. When two relief workers, Simona Torretta and Simona Pari, were freed last year, intelligence sources said the ransom paid was $5m."
Money to arm the terrorists, which are then used to kill the troops. And they are mad at us?
This better not be true.
WHAT IN THE HELL ARE THEY PAYING TERRORIST FOR ?????
She didn't want to be questioned by the pro-American Iraqis.
Wonder why.
I just can't believe they would put that money in the TERRORISTS hands. My God !!!
In other words, they were going much faster than was routine to approach a checkpoint manned by armed soldiers with orders to defend themselves as they needed to.
The Italian story is BS, but let's keep in mind that it's the Italian communists who are giving their version.
Paying ransom money (allegedly) like this will only encourage the spread of criminal gangs - not necessarily related to the insurgency - who kidnap for cash.
I was struck by that quote, too. She didn't say "we weren't going fast at all" or "we were going rather slowly"... she said "we weren't going very fast, considering". That tells me they were going pretty fast (keeping in mind that she has reason to downplay their speed). Also the reports are that it was a windswept, rainy night. Any car approaching a checkpoint near a U.S. base, on that dangerous stretch of the Airport Road, in those conditions at anything but a cautious crawl is courting danger.
Exactly.....I was mad when I first heard this story, blaming US GIs...now Im pi$$ed they payed off the terrorist....that money will be used to kill more US troops.
"Drive fast, turn left" is for NASCAR, not approaching a U.S. checkpoint in a war zone. The silly girl should thank her lucky stars she wasn't perforated as well. Oh, well, what more can you expect from a communist?
Another Al-Jazeera coincidence. Why a "stray" J-DAM hasn't hit their head office yet is beyond me...
300-400 shots and only 1 kill?
This is what happens when you don't know who the enemy is. After a while, it appears to be everyone.
Something else...
<< An official said they had not given any news of Sgrenas release to the American embassy in Baghdad, or to US military commanders >>
...makes me think the Italians were trying to do this all secretly, to spirit her back to Italy to cover up the ransom payment; she would just magically reappear back home.
No wonder they didn't want to stop at a checkpoint.
My relatives in Italy are saying people think it was an inside job. The journalist works for a far left communist newspaper, sympathizers with the insurgents. They were looking to extort money from the Italian government and the journalist was in on it. Unfortunately, it looks like they got their money.
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