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Kidnappers set new deadline for Jill Carroll

‘There is a very short time,’ abducted American says in video

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'Just do whatever they want'
Feb. 9: Kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll appears in a video, appealing for her supporters to do whatever it takes to win her release.

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updated 1:42 a.m. ET Feb. 11, 2006

KUWAIT CITY - Kidnappers holding American journalist Jill Carroll say they will carry out a threat to kill her unless their demands are met by a Feb. 26 deadline, Kuwait’s Al Rai TV said on Friday, citing sources close to her captors.

In response to a question from Reuters, Al Rai chairman Jassem Boodai declined to specify the kidnappers’ demands. In previous videos, Carroll has said her captors are demanding that all female prisoners in Iraq be freed.

“The demands are specific. We have passed them on to the authorities,” Boodai told Reuters.

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The private television station said sources reported Carroll was being held in a house in Baghdad along with other women.

According to NBC News, the State Department had not yet confirmed the reports of the new deadline set by Carroll’s kidnappers. An official, who spoke on condition on anonymity, reiterated that “the United States does not concede to terrorist demands,” and said authorities would continue to work with Iraqi officials to win her safe release.

In video of Carroll aired Thursday on the television station, she appealed to her supporters to do whatever it takes to win her release “as quickly as possible.”

Initially, abductors had threatened to kill Carroll by Jan. 20 if the female prisoners were not released.

In the video, Carroll said she was speaking on Feb. 2, nearly a month after she was abducted in Baghdad by armed men who killed her Iraqi translator.

‘Please do it fast,’ Carroll says
“I am here. I am fine,” the 28-year-old freelancer says in the video. “Please just do whatever they want, give them whatever they want as quickly as possible. There is a very short time. Please do it fast. That’s all.”

The 22-second video was delivered earlier Thursday to Al Rai TV’s office in Baghdad and was aired in its entirety, Hani al-Srougi, an editor at the station’s headquarters in Kuwait, told The Associated Press. It was accompanied by a letter written by Carroll.

The newscaster said on air Thursday that the station would hand the letter over to authorities.

Boodai told Reuters that the station did not plan to broadcast the contents of the letter. “Because of the sensitive matters mentioned in it, we handed it over to Kuwaiti authorities,” he said.

Tania Anderson, a spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait, said, “The embassy customarily works closely with our contacts with the Kuwaiti government and will seek their cooperation on this matter as well.”

Previous letter mentioned
In the tape, Carroll mentions the letter and suggests that her captors issued a letter in her handwriting previously. It was the first report of any letters from Carroll.

“I am with the mujahadeen (holy warriors). I sent you a letter written by my hand, but you wanted more evidence, so we are sending you this letter now to prove I am with the mujahadeen,” she said.

Carroll wore a conservative Islamic headscarf and appeared composed, speaking in a strong voice and sitting in front of what appeared to be a decorative wall-hanging with a large, stylized flower.

The video included audio, unlike two previous videos of Carroll.

Carroll, a reporter for The Christian Science Monitor, was abducted on Jan. 7 in Baghdad.

In Baghdad, U.S. Embassy spokesman Dennis Culkin said Thursday that American authorities routinely do not comment on such tapes, especially before they have been authenticated.

After Thursday’s broadcast, Carroll’s family issued a brief statement through The Christian Science Monitor, saying that “the family is hopeful and grateful to all those working on Jill’s behalf.”

The newspaper also issued a statement: “It is always difficult to see someone speaking under coercion and under these circumstances,” said Monitor editor Richard Bergenheim. “We are seeking more information about the letter that Jill refers to in the video. We remain in constant contact with Jill’s family and are still doing everything possible to obtain Jill’s release.”


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