Photographer tells kidnapping tale
Dwayne Jenkings  |  by www.caycompass.com. All rights reserved. 2.04 | 6:28

EDITOR rsquo;S NOTE ndash; Associated Press photographer Emilio Morenatti was the latest foreigner kidnapped in an increasingly chaotic Gaza Strip. This is the 37 ndash;year ndash;old Spaniard rsquo;s account of his harrowing 16 hours in captivity.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) ndash; I was supposed to spend Tuesday photographing scavengers picking through Gaza rsquo;s abandoned Jewish settlements.


Just before 7 a.m., I took my cameras and lenses and left my apartment in Gaza City to meet my friend Majed Hamdan, an Associated Press driver and translator waiting for me on the street.


But before I could get into the car, a white Volkswagen Golf raced up and blocked our way. Four men with Kalashnikov assault rifles jumped out. They grabbed me, threw me into their car and took off.

Looking back, I saw Majed lying on the street with two men pointing rifles at his head.
My abductors pushed me down on the back seat and covered me with some kind of fabric, shouting, Go down, go down and shut up in English. About 15 minutes later, they rushed me out of the car and into a house, then shoved me into a small basement room where I was alone except for a few rats.


A sense of feverishness swept over me, leaving me feeling so fatigued that I almost fell asleep on the floor.
I was allowed to keep my wristwatch, so I knew five hours had passed by the time my captors came back. All were in jeans, black shirts and black masks.

When I tried to speak with them, all they said was shut up.
One of them explained, in sign language, that if I tried to escape I would be shot. He told me this two or three times, trying to appear aggressive.

But I gathered he was in his 20s ndash; too young to seem really tough.
I saw that I was in a nice house. There was a high wall around it, and a well ndash;tended garden with flowers.


Then came the most terrifying moment. Someone blindfolded me. They told me to get on my knees and made me raise my hands.

A thousand possibilities flooded my mind ndash; one of them that they were about to kill me. I felt they might do something crazy.
Then they put a sack over my head, and over that a veil, dressing me in a woman rsquo;s robe.

They gave me flip ndash;flops that were half the size of my feet and made it difficult to walk. Then they took me out and put me in a car again and we started driving.
Some of my guards were women.

Sitting in the back seat, I had a woman on my left. Another woman sat next to the driver with a baby who was crying and crying, ignoring attempts to quiet it.
This calmed me a bit, because I thought that maybe if I was with women and a baby, nothing too bad would happen to me.


I couldn rsquo;t see, but I could hear the sounds of Gaza City: noisy traffic, even police cars. The car stopped, and I was taken into another building and put in a room so dark I could barely see, even though they took off my blindfold. I could hear my captors having a furious discussion outside the door, but in Arabic, a language I don rsquo;t speak.


I was left alone for about seven hours.
One woman brought me food: triangles of cheese and some meat, and a glass of tea. She tried to talk to me ndash; something about Europe, America and Arab countries ndash; but we couldn rsquo;t understand each other.

She was kind to me.
When I needed to use the bathroom, they blindfolded me again and escorted me through a long courtyard to a toilet in a small, dirty room, and then they took me back. I could hear children in the courtyard.

It seemed I was sharing a regular house with my captors.
I couldn rsquo;t tell if my guards were the same people who kidnapped me, or if I rsquo;d been passed on to someone else. All in all, there were as many as 15 different people during my captivity.


At one point, a woman blindfolded me again. I asked her if something bad was going to happen, and mimed a pistol pointed at my head. She said no, then added: Halas, or that rsquo;s it, which I thought meant I was going to be freed.


I could hear thunder outside, and rain coming down.
Suddenly one of my captors put a cell phone to my ear, and I heard a man rsquo;s voice speaking English with an Arabic accent. He didn rsquo;t identify himself.

He told me everything would be OK, that I would be released soon.
One of the captors took me out and put me in a car. I had been blindfolded again and dressed in women rsquo;s clothing, but five minutes into the drive they let me take off the blindfold and the robe.

I couldn rsquo;t make out where I was, but I saw a street awash from the rain.
They drove me to a building where members of the Palestinian security forces were milling around. Someone told me in English, You are with us, you are safe.


A policeman handed me a cell phone, and the Spanish foreign minister, Miguel Moratinos, was on the line. We spoke for five minutes, and he told me my family had been very concerned, but now everything was fine.
From there I was taken to the office of President Mahmoud Abbas.

I was led into a room filled with journalists and Palestinian officials. I embraced my AP colleagues, especially Majed. Police handed me my camera gear, cell phone and passport.


After all this, it might be hard to go back to Gaza. But I hope to do so soon.
Our Comments section is an open platform for all points of view, on any topic which concerns our readers.



We welcome your comments, which must be signed by the writer. Submissions must include a valid email address, the writer rsquo;s full name and a daytime phone number.

Read more on by www.caycompass.com. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Gaza City, Associated Press, Gaza Strip
Related news
  • FREE Deals coupons on consumer products | dealplumber best deals, price bargains
    Robert Downey Jr

    posted by on Dec 28, 06 expires on January, 30 2006 They re running a special promotion for the Polar White Sanyo Katana SCP -6600. You get the phone free and the shipping free with the activation of a new wireless plan...

  • ThinkGeek :: Video Watch with OLED Screen
    Anna Nicole Smith

    For a wristwatch to be considered truly geeky it should have one of two things - the ability to play audio and video or some kind of communication functionality (like a built-in cell phone)...

  • Brand Forums
    Pamela Anderson

    TimeZoners are brought together by their love of watches. Glash u tte Original honors this love with their work. It is their daily ambition to 160-year company history, and on the other hand an expression of creativity, innovation, and the future...

  • Black's Mail: Strange Days
    Usher

    For the past few months to a few years, I have been experiencing a strange phenomenon, whereby nearly every electronic device in sustained close contact with my body has become inoperable. No, I’m not talking about breaking stuff...

  • British Grand Vision International Off The Hook
    Kym Marsh

    The filing of an illegal gambling charge against alleged online gambling operator British Grand Vision International in Clark, Philippines has been dismissed by the city prosecutor’s office...

Post comments
Name
Place
7 + 5 =
Comments