British IT expert held captive for more than two years after Baghdad kidnap laments not trying to escape
Watch the GuardianFilms investigation into how the hostages were taken to Iran

Peter Moore, the British IT expert who spent 31 months in captivity after being kidnapped in Iraq, has revealed how he thought he was about to be killed on the day of his release, spent his ordeal unable to see clearly without his glasses, and played table-tennis with a guard.

Moore said he regretted not trying to escape during the early days of his detention when the captives had the opportunity to kill a guard. The computer consultant from Lincoln said he had had a chance to flee when one of the two men watching over him fell ill.

The 36-year-old told Channel 4 News and the Times how he was seized, with four bodyguards, from a government building in Baghdad in May 2007. He was released in December last year and arrived home on New Year’s Day.

Moore said he and his fellow captives were stripped down to their underpants during their capture. Later, his glasses were taken, leaving the short-sighted consultant unable to see clearly until his release.

Moore paid tribute to the other four men seized, saying he was “very grateful” for their help and the medical treatment they gave him after his abduction.

Jason Creswell, Jason Swindlehurst and Alec MacLachlan were shot dead and their bodies returned to Britain last year. Alan McMenemy, the fourth bodyguard, is also believed to be dead.

Moore told Channel 4 News that early in their detention he and Creswell were asked to treat the sick guard.The hostages discussed using a syringe to inject him with air bubbles and attempting to overpower the remaining captor.

“I was concerned it was going to go out of the frying pan into the fire. There were two of them with us but 100 outside. I think we should have done it in hindsight. It was the best chance we had. I think one or two would have been killed and one made it out.

“There was a woman downstairs with a child and we would have had to kill her too.”

The men were seized at the end of May 2007, but they were held together only until July. Moore remained with McMenemy, chained side by side in cramped rooms with only a television for comfort until December, he told the Times.

Moore was training finance ministry workers how to spot misspent money when about 100 police in 20 vehicles stormed the building. Initially he believed he was being arrested. It was only when they began removing his clothes during the ride to Sadr City that he realised otherwise.

Moore, who has talked of being subjected to mock executions, said he was beaten on a near-daily basis and once subjected to severe punishment for allegedly breaking a lock.

“They tied my hands behind my back and put a chair next to the door. I was made to stand on the chair with my hands over the door and they pulled the chair out to leave me hanging. They did that four or five times. It was very painful. I was screaming in pain.”

Moore said he tried to appeal to his captors’ respect for family and religion, so invented a Brazilian wife and pretended to be Catholic. His act seemed to have worked – his kidnappers gave him a string of Islamic beads to pray with.

In early 2009, a major who spoke English ordered that Moore no longer be kept in chains. The two men watched tennis together on television. One day the major appeared with two table tennis bats and a ball.

“We got quite fast, playing for hours at a time,” said Moore. “It was a good laugh.” The kidnappers had made clear they wanted a prisoner exchange: the five British hostages for leaders who had been arrested by British forces in Iraq but held by the US military. “I just knew we were in it for the long haul,” Moore said.

As his living conditions improved, he began to suspect that the other four hostages were dead. On the morning of 30 December last year, he was woken at 5am and told to get dressed in jeans and black top because he was going to be released. Moore refused to believe them. “I was just like, ‘Go away,’ and put the blanket over my head.”

He was bundled into a car, transferred to a minibus, then to another car and finally driven to a driveway where he was met by a large group of Iraqi men in suits and others in combat gear with machineguns. “I thought, ‘S***, I am going to die,’” he told the Times.

But a man stepped forward and introduced himself as Sami al-Askari, an Iraqi MP, and told Moore: “I am from the Iraqi government and you are a free man.”

In his television interview, Moore contested Foreign Office claims that his kidnappers, from a Shia organisation, Asaib Ahl al-Haq, or the League of the Righteous, had requested a news blackout and insisted they wanted to publicise their message.

“They felt they complied with everything the British embassy said but still were not getting what they wanted,” Moore said.

A Guardian investigation reported that the hostages were taken to Iran within a day of their kidnapping in an operation led and masterminded by the Quds Force, part of Iran’s revolutionary guard.

But Moore believed he was held in houses in Basra and the cities of Hilla, Karbala and Baghdad during his captivity, although he conceded the men might have been driven across the border.

Iraqi intelligence sources told the Guardian the British captives were never made aware they had crossed the border and back within 24 hours of being seized.

The Foreign Office has continued to insist there was no evidence that Moore was held in Iran, despite claims by Iraqi intelligence that they told their British counterparts and the Foreign Office that the hostages were taken across the border.

General David Petraeus, the head of US central command, said Moore was “certainly” held in Iran for at least some of his time in captivity, although he told Reuters it was “difficult to say” what role the revolutionary guard played.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



Related articles

  • Protests as Gordon Brown sits before Chilcot Iraq inquiry
    Soldiers' families and anti-war protesters turn out, but in far smaller numbers than when Tony Blair appearedA protester dressed as Death, wearing a black cape and displaying a chancellor's briefcase stuffed with war tax notes, stood outside the Chilcot inquiry in London today as the prime minister strode in, smiling.There was a ragged chant of "Gordon Brown – to The Hague" from anti-war demonstra...
  • Nicolas Sarkozy and Gordon Brown hail ‘entente formidable’
    Two leaders stress need for close co-operation to stay 'bang in the middle' of EuropeGordon Brown today described Britain's alliance with France as an "entente formidable" as he and Nicolas Sarkozy stressed the need for close co-operation and to stay "bang in the middle" of Europe.Speaking at a press conference after a working lunch at Downing Street today, the two leaders highlighted close politi...
  • UK urged to apologise for ex-Bosnian president’s prison ‘mistreatment’
    Chairman of joint presidency of Bosnia-Herzegovina says Ejup Ganic, arrested in London after extradition request from Serbia, was denied access to medicineThe British government should apologise to a former Bosnian president for his "mistreatment" in prison, the chairman of the joint presidency of Bosnia-Herzegovina said today.Ejup Ganic, who served as vice-president and president of Bosnia and He...
  • Gordon Brown rejects criticism from former military chiefs over defence spending
    Prime minister says former chiefs of defence staff Lord Guthrie and Lord Boyce are wrong to say military budget was insufficient for two warsGordon Brown today rejected criticisms from former military chiefs who accused him of starving the armed forces of funds when he was chancellor.The prime minister also claimed it was "incredibly unfair" of Conservatives, including Sir John Major, the former p...
  • UK complained to US about terror suspect torture, says ex-MI5 boss
    • Waterboarding of 9/11 suspect was 'concealed'• Manningham-Buller criticises Bush staffThe government protested to the US over the torture of terror suspects, the former head of MI5, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller revealed last night.She also said the Americans concealed from Britain the waterboarding of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the September 2001 attacks."The Americans wer...
  • Every request from military for Iraq war was granted, Brown tells Chilcot
    PM says he did not deny forces equipment while chancellor and expresses regret over US failings in planningBritain's military commanders were granted every request they made for equipment in the Iraq war, Gordon Brown declared today as he mounted a strong defence of his record as chancellor.Amid widespread criticism that he risked the lives of soldiers by resisting requests from the military top b...
  • Right war, right reasons: day Gordon Brown came clean on Iraq
    Prime minister tells Chilcot inquiry Tony Blair did 'everything properly' and rejects criticisms over equipmentGordon Brown took a major political gamble today by describing Tony Blair's decision to go to war in Iraq as "the right decision for the right reasons" and insisting that "everything that Mr Blair did during this period, he did properly".Dogged by a reputation for disowning unpopular deci...