Book casts harsh light on former hostage in Colombia
By Simon Romero
Friday, February 27, 2009
CARACAS: Ingrid Betancourt, the aristocratic Colombian politician greeted as a heroine last year after enduring years as a hostage of Marxist guerrillas, is depicted as a selfish and haughty captivity mate in a memoir by three American military contractors who were held alongside her.
"I don't want to attack her, but the truth is very savage," said Keith Stansell, 44, an ex-Marine and one of the authors of the book, "Out of Captivity," which was released Thursday. "We were infected enough with her behavior in the jungle," he said in a telephone interview from New York. "Now I just want to get immunized."
Indeed, Stansell and his co-authors, Thomas Howes and Marc Gonsalves, offer a far different portrait of Betancourt in the 457-page book than the generally accepted image of her outside Colombia as a long-suffering abduction victim who had nobly resisted her captors since her kidnapping in 2002.
In a daring operation last July, Colombian commandos plucked Betancourt, the three Americans and 11 other captives from the arms of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the FARC. The rescue operation thrust Betancourt, a former presidential candidate in Colombia who has since settled in France, back into the public eye.
The Americans' book is mainly an account of their capture by the FARC and their survival while faced with jungle marches, a raft of tropical diseases and being chained to one another to discourage escape.
The book also portrays Betancourt as seeking to put herself at the top of a hostage hierarchy, hoarding used clothing and writing materials from the others, determining bathing schedules, hiding information from a transistor radio that she had squirreled away, even throwing a fit about the color of a mattress she was given. (It was baby blue.)
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