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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: The Day that Changed the World
Chapter 2: The View from Jalozai
Chapter 3: Carrying On Up the Khyber
Chapter 4: Daisy, Daoud and Danger
Chapter 5: My Silent World Beneath the Burka
Chapter 6: Into the Hands of the Taliban
Chapter 7: Captivity
Chapter 8: Prayers, Pomegranates and Prison
Chapter 9: Bombs Over Kabul
Chapter 10: Return to Islamabad
Chapter 11: Home
Chapter 12: The Making of a Spy
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
There are so many people I wish to thank for enabling me to produce this book, which I dedicate to my wonderful daughter Daisy.
I want to thank my mother Joyce, father Allan and sisters Viv and Jill for their love and encouragement; Sunday Express Editor Martin Townsend for giving me the time off to write this book; News Editor Jim Murray and all the staff of the Sunday Express for their unstinting support – I’m sorry I put you through so much hell. Special thanks also to Richard Desmond for sending Editorial Director Paul Ashford and lawyer Salaya Hussain-Din to negotiate with the Taliban for my release. Thanks to Jeremy Robson and Joanne Brooks of Robson Books, for their editorial skills and also Andy Armitage. Of course the book could not have been written without my release so the Taliban’s one-eyed spiritual leader Mullah Muhammad Omar should be acknowledged along with Abdullah Mounir who protected me when I was held in Jalalabad. Peace and love to the Shelter Now people who kept me sane when I was held in Kabul. There are scores of others who I should also thank who worked behind the scenes to secure my release including James Hunt, Kevin Cahill, John Mappin, Ian Lynch, Julia Hartley Brewer, Helen Carter, Barbara Gunnell, Tracy McVeigh, Rebekah Wade, Anne Graham, Daoud Zaaroura, Joe Mills, Haji Saab, Lone Wolf and Malcolm X. Extra special thanks to my rock and friend Daphne Romney.
1
THE DAY THAT CHANGED THE WORLD
Tuesday 11 September should have been a really pleasant day for me. Although I started the day at the Sunday Express newsroom with six weeks’ worth of expenses forms to fill in, I was expecting to have a fairly relaxing time. Tuesdays are normally quite civilised days for Sunday newspaper journalists: a day to meet old and new contacts for lunch in the Ivy or Quaglinos followed by some pleasant wine in a local bar and then on to a Soho watering hole.
Unfortunately, however, this Tuesday I had to deal with those expenses forms, a feat that seems to require the mind of an accountant and the memory of an elephant. In the good old days no one questioned expenses or five-hour lunches, but, now that the accountants are steering the running of most national newspapers, things have changed. Pity, because some great stories can emerge during leisurely lunches with story providers.
On top of that I had also promised a good contact that I would visit him in prison following a grave miscarriage of justice. He had been wrongly convicted of perjury – no, not Jeffrey Archer. Someone who really is innocent.
Ironically, considering my job as a reporter, I hate working to deadlines. Here I was, at the beginning of the week, with two ‘must dos’ already. As a result, I was uncharacteristically grumpy and tutted my way through the paperwork. Leisurely lunch? I’d be lucky if I had time to grab a cheese-and-pickle sandwich.
As I was determined not to be distracted, my head was bowed and I was ignoring the usual office banter, which can be quite lively. Various colleagues peeled off, leaving me virtually alone in the office.
Our news operation is part of a small enclave in the major newsroom that houses the Daily Express journalists, photographers, newsdesk people, subeditors, graphic artists and other folk who all work to get out the newspaper from an office block on Blackfriars Bridge (known affectionately as ‘the grey Lubyanka’).
Slowly, in the middle of this fairly unremarkable day, I became aware of people beginning to cluster in front of the TV sets that are strategically placed around the newsroom. I half turned and was shocked to see running pictures of the World Trade Center’s north tower on fire.
It was nearly 2 p.m. and I immediately called my elder sister Viv at her flower shop in Newcastle to tell her to switch on the TV. We had been in New York three weeks earlier and she had refused to queue to go up the WTC because she was more interested in a florist’s on the ground floor.
I told her the pilot must have had a heart attack or something, and had lost control of the plane, causing it to crash into the WTC. It didn’t occur to me that it could be anything else. Later, I cursed myself for not insisting on going up to the observatory.
Viv and I had both fallen in love with the Big Apple and had stayed at the Regent Hotel in Wall Street, where we were treating ourselves to well-earned, five-star, luxury Manhattan style. It was less than two hundred yards away from the WTC and the only five-star-rated hotel in the financial sector. The building was the original stock exchange and had reinvented itself several times since. Now a hotel, it boasts the biggest bath tubs in New York. Pity I just had my big sis to keep me company!
My sister and I had been staying in New York after visiting my eight-year-old daughter Daisy at her summer camp, which was about a two-hour drive away. Daisy was staying there for a total of six weeks. She was entertained every day, had constant care and did not have time to get bored – this was much more fun for her than my hiring an au pair in the UK for the summer holidays. (God, why do I constantly feel the need to justify myself when it comes to Daisy, aged eight, going on 38? She’s a fantastic, well-balanced kid and we love each other. I would spend more time with her if I could but the harsh realities of being a single mum and a working journalist make life difficult. Catty remarks from other women certainly don’t help, either.)
My memories of New York were in total contrast to the scene that was unfolding before me on TV. Viv was stunned as she listened to my running commentary. Then she hung up to call her husband, Bill Brown, because she knew he had work colleagues in the WTC.
I continued to watch the drama, still totally unaware that American Airlines Flight 11, en route from Boston’s Logan Airport to Los Angeles, had been deliberately flown into the north tower at 8.48 a.m. New York time.
Around ten minutes later I got straight back on the telephone to my sister. I had just watched United Airlines Flight 175, another Boeing 767, slam into the south tower. I was almost hyperventilating as I spoke to her. She immediately hung up and called her husband.
Frustrated, I looked around the newsroom but everyone I needed to speak to was on lunch break. I had to get out to New York. This was terror on an unbelievable scale, the biggest story since the assassination of JFK.
New York City reacted sharply. All bridges and tunnels were closed down and by 2.25 p.m. President George W Bush was describing the WTC strikes as ‘an apparent terrorist attack on our country’.
The New York Stock Exchange closed and America’s airports had ground to a halt. Someone had gone to war with America and comparisons were already being made to Pearl Harbor.
By now I was running between the TV, the telephone on my desk and my mobile. I tried calling my news editor, Jim Murray, and the editor, Martin Townsend, because I knew I just had to get out to New York.
By 2.45 p.m., American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757, en route from Dulles Airport, had smashed into the Pentagon, causing one of its five sides to collapse. Minutes later the White House was evacuated and we all guessed that it was to be the next target as people talked feverishly about at least one other plane that was unaccounted for.r />
Damn! I still couldn’t get hold of the news editor and I was told to ‘calm down’ by Jonathan Calvert, an assistant editor, because it was only Tuesday. I couldn’t believe it. How could someone remain so calm when the biggest story of the century was unfolding before our very eyes?
I watched in awe as office workers began to hurl themselves from the top floors of the WTC. God, it must have been hellish in there if the only option was to jump out of a high window! I didn’t want to watch any more, but I was drawn to the seeming surrealism of it all. It was compulsive viewing, it was happening live and it was horror beyond anyone’s wildest imagination.
Jim Murray walked into the newsroom full of bonhomie, followed a few minutes later by Martin Townsend. As I explained what had happened Martin said he wanted to send me to New York, whereas Jim thought I should go to the Middle East, because of its suspected links with the atrocities in the USA.
Personally, I thought I should go to Damascus or Lebanon, where I have some very interesting contacts who could point me in the right direction. After I interviewed Ahmed Jibril, then leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command (a group then suspected by some of blowing up Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie) inside his Damascus bunker in 1992 – while I was seven months pregnant – my standing rose in the more shadowy side of Middle East politics. My standing was also increased by the fact that I was living with Daoud Zaaroura, a colonel with the Palestine Liberation Organisation and a legendary former commander of Fatah Land in South Lebanon from 1972 to 1976, who later became Yasser Arafat’s head of intelligence. As the father of my baby-to-be, he moved in with me at my flat in Newcastle and claimed political asylum after Arafat had banned him from continuing our relationship. But that’s another story. Anyway, he remains one of my best friends.
Back at the office the editor and Jim threw around all the possibilities and quickly made the decision to send me to New York. As I hurried out of the newsroom the south tower of the World Trade Center collapsed in a plume of ash and debris and, by 3 p.m., United Airlines Flight 93, a Boeing 757 en route from Newark, New Jersey, to San Francisco, crashed just north of the Somerset County Airport, about eighty miles southeast of Pittsburgh.
Off I headed to Heathrow Airport via home to pick up some clothes. By the time I reached the airport, all inbound transatlantic flights were being diverted to Canada and the WTC’s north tower had also collapsed.
The scenes were chaotic as I queued at the British Airways desk, only to find out an hour later that there were no flights going over the Atlantic for at least a day. There was a flight to Brazil and I thought I could get that. As I thought out loud, trying to work out the logistics of getting to America, I was told that the borders with Mexico and Canada had been shut. Being a born optimist, I nevertheless bought a flight ticket to New York for Thursday 13 September, because I was convinced the airspace would be open by then.
I headed despondently back to the office with my holdall packed but triumphant that at least I’d got a ticket for New York on Thursday morning. By now, New York’s Mayor Rudolph Guiliani had ordered an evacuation of Manhattan south of Canal Street and I wondered whether the friends I had made some weeks earlier in the 55 Wall Street hotel were OK. I couldn’t get through to them – all communications seemed to be down.
I then called Daisy at her boarding school in the Lake District to ask if she had heard the terrible stories of what had happened in New York. Although she had, it was evident that the full scale of those events had not impacted on her. At this point I had the difficult task of telling her that I was going to fly out to New York. I tried to temper the potentially upsetting news by promising her that I would bring her a lovely present back. Having the materialistic tendencies of many children, she was quickly appeased. Daisy and I do a lot of travelling together and she hates my going abroad without her. We always call our trips our little adventures. She reminded me that I must be back in time for her half-term because I had bought tickets for both of us to travel to Amsterdam. Then she put the telephone down – she hates it when I cut off first and always worries whether I’m still on the line during my telephone conversations with her. Still, I think I used to do that as a child.
When I had got back to the office, I had gone across the road to Stamford’s Wine Bar and asked for one of Lynne’s specials. She’s the manager and makes a spectacular Pimm’s, probably the best I’ve ever tasted. I like Stammy’s, as it is affectionately known. The banter is good and the girls behind the bar are a laugh, but the atmosphere that night was flat – just bloody awful, in fact. I suppose people everywhere were in a state of shock. From there I ordered a cab to Gerry’s Club in Soho.
I usually go home via Gerry’s. Actually, I always go home via Gerry’s! Maybe I should get the taxi to drive in from the top of Dean Street and Oxford Street so I can avoid this nightly temptation. But you tell me where you can go for a drink until 3 a.m., behave badly and run a tab even when you’re skint!
I got my membership there by default about eight years before, when I was working as deputy editor of Wales on Sunday in Cardiff. I had been in London for some function and bumped into an old mate, an investigative journalist called Kevin Cahill. We’d been to the House of Lords and ended up in Gerry’s with three Peers of the Realm. As we made merry, more drink was demanded, but we were running out of funds. Ingenious host Michael said I could become a member if I could find a seconder, and then I could run a tab. At least I think that’s what happened! Since then it’s been a home from home for me.
I was shocked when I walked in on the night of the 11th, though. It was very quiet, with just a couple at the bar, and they were subdued. We began talking about the day’s events and the girl told me it was her boyfriend’s birthday – one he’d never forget, I remarked. We reflected about the motives behind the terrorist strike on America and wondered whether it had its roots in the Middle East.
We debated whether this was the start of a huge war of terror on the West and what the backlash would be in London, where we’ve had to live with terrorist activities for years.
When I got home I switched on my portable TV, which had been behaving very badly lately. However, it flickered into action with the day’s events. Some hours earlier, World Trade Center Seven, a 47-storey tower, had collapsed from damage. 200 firemen and 78 policemen were missing. In a speech at Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, President Bush declared that security measures would be taken, and pledged, ‘Make no mistake, the United States will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts.’ Brave, strong and stirring words.
It’s a shame that after making his speech in Louisiana he then had to slink off to Nebraska’s Offutt Air Force Base, home to the US Strategic Command. I thought he should have made New York his first port of call, and then Washington, followed by Pittsburgh. Although I can be quite critical of our politicians and royalty, I don’t think that they would head for the nearest bunker in a disaster.
The next day, I woke up with a hangover and dived into my favourite ‘greasy-spoon’ café for a latte and bacon sandwich. I read through the newspapers, whose front pages were dramatic and heartbreaking. Once in the office, I worked away on background stories until 2 a.m. We had a huge pull-out to produce and it was a case of ‘all hands on deck’.
I made many calls to friends, colleagues and contacts with New York connections, and then I made just as many calls to contacts in the Middle East, some moody characters and just the general sorts of unsavoury types investigative journalists tend to meet. I had to cancel my facial at Harvey Nichols and I never made Chris Boffey’s leaving do. He was an assistant editor at the Sunday Telegraph and a former Sunday Mirror news editor. Chris Hastings, one of his reporters and a personal friend of mine from my days in Newcastle, nagged me about going to the do, and I promised faithfully I would, but by the time I looked at my watch it was after 11 p.m. and I still had loads of work to do.
I can’t even keep friends, never min
d husbands or boyfriends, I observed wryly. This job can be all-consuming but I never tire of the twists and turns thrown up by life and I tend to believe that old adage that the truth is always far stranger than fiction.
Actually my life is stranger than fiction at times. People always give a double take when I say I’ve been married three times, although Daisy’s father was not one of my husbands. I can never understand why it is OK to have adulterous affairs or a series of live-in lovers but not a series of husbands! I guess I have a real appetite for life, what with my relationships and the times I spend at Gerry’s. Friends of mine wonder at my energy but I can only sleep about three or four hours, anyway, and I don’t like my own company, so I really enjoy going to the club.
I remember being horrified when someone told me that we usually sleep an average of 27 years before we shuffle off this mortal coil. Twenty-seven years! My God, it’s frightening! Just think how much you can miss in that time. (In addition to that little gem of information I might add that most people die in their sleep. Ha, so there you go! Now we know why. Going to sleep can prove terminal – so I try to avoid it if I can.)
I got home at three o’clock on Thursday morning. I repacked my holdall and headed for Paddington Station and on to the Heathrow Express for my flight to New York. I would be able to catch up on some sleep during the flight. When I arrived, one of the station’s supervisors told me that the service had stopped and would not resume until 5 a.m. As I was about to sit down in the freezing cold station he took pity on me and showed me into a private room, where I crashed out in the corner within minutes. No stamina, Ridley!
He woke me up later and I headed for the Heathrow Express. It was bloody freezing and my padded leather jacket was not protecting me at all. As I arrived in Heathrow I discovered that my flight had been cancelled yet again, so I headed back to the office with the obligatory latte and bacon sandwich being consumed on the hoof.
In the Hands of the Taliban Page 1