By Karin Strohecker -
VIENNA (Reuters) - An Austrian girl held
captive for eight years told on Wednesday how the thought of escaping
kept her alive, but that she feared fleeing might provoke her kidnapper
into killing her and others in a murder spree.
For the first time
since her dash to freedom two weeks ago, 18-year-old Natascha Kampusch
spoke about the years of loneliness, hunger and agony she spent in a
windowless cell beneath the garage of Wolfgang Priklopil's house near
Vienna.
"I promised myself I would grow older, stronger and
sturdier to be able to break free one day," Kampusch said in her first
television interview, looking fragile but composed and confident
despite her ordeal and the subsequent media frenzy.
"I made a deal with myself that the Natascha of the future would
come back to free that little 12-year-old girl," the young woman with a
bright smile and baby blue eyes said in the Austrian Television (ORF)
interview, recorded on Tuesday.
Priklopil locked Kampusch in the
6 square meter (65 sq ft) cell in the sedate commuter town of
Strasshof, 25 km (15 miles) outside the capital, after abducting her at
the age of 10 on her way to school in 1998.
Kampusch recalled her horror when Priklopil made her enter for the first time the cell that would be her home for years.
"It felt very claustrophobic in that small room," said Kampusch, who was short of breath and suffering from a cold.
"I threw water bottles against the walls or banged against them with my fists so that maybe someone could hear me.
Story here from source.
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