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Final move of a deadly game: how we duped guards and jumped to freedom
Final move of a deadly game: how we duped guards and jumped to freedom
Tom Coghlan Kabul The hostages played game after game of draughts with their Taleban captors until the guards became drowsy. Then they made their big move. With the gunmen asleep on the floor beside them, the two captives crept to the window, dropped a length of old rope they had hidden during months of captivity, shimmied down and raced to freedom. The extraordinary escape of a Pulitzer prize-winning American journalist and his Afghan translator from Islamic militants was described yesterday for the first time. David Rohde, 41, a New York Times reporter, and Tahir Luddin, 34, an Afghan journalist who has worked for The Times for several years, fled after being held for seven months in a lawless region in northwest Pakistan described as "the most dangerous place on Earth" by US officials and a haven for al-Qaeda and the Taleban. Mr Luddin told how they sneaked past sleeping guards at the Taleban prison near the town of Miram Shah after tiring out the men with repeated games of draughts. He...
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