Baraa Melhem, 20, holds a doll, a gift from her mother, in her room at her mother’s house in the West Bank village of Qalandia, near Ramallah, on Monday. She was imprisoned for 10 years by her father.
Baraa Melhem, 20, holds a doll, a gift from her mother, in her room at her mother’s house in the West Bank village of Qalandia, near Ramallah, on Monday. She was imprisoned for 10 years by her father.

Palestinian woman freed after being held captive by father for 10 years



JERUSALEM // A young Palestinian woman imprisoned for 10 years in a series of dark rooms by her father said she survived by listening to the radio, dreaming of seeing sunshine again and finding small pleasure in the apple she was fed each day.

Baraa Melhem, 20, said she was enjoying her first taste of freedom after a decade of isolation and threats of rape and abuse.

She now hopes to use her experience to help others.

"I have joy now. My life has begun," she said on Monday.

Ms Melhem was rescued by Palestinian security forces in the West Bank town of Qalqiliya on Saturday after an aunt notified police.

Adnan Damiri, a Palestinian police spokesman, said she was in "deplorable" condition.

Her father and stepmother, both Arab citizens of Israel, were turned over to the Israeli authorities.

Locked up in Israel, neither could be reached for comment.

The father, Hassan Melhem, 49, is expected to appear in an Israeli court today, said the Israeli police spokesman, Micky Rosenfeld.

The stepmother's name was not available.

Speaking softly but confidently, Ms Melhem said she was beaten, barely fed and let out only in the middle of the night to do housework.

She was given only a blanket, a radio and a razor blade by her father and stepmother, and both of them encouraged her to kill herself.

"I don't hate my father. But I hate what he did to me. Why did he do it? I don't understand," she said.

Ms Melhem was first locked up in a bathroom after she ran away from home when she was 10.

Police brought her home and her father forced her to sign a statement saying she did not want to go back to school.

Her parents divorced when she was four and her father was given custody. Ms Melhem is now living with her mother, Maysoun, in East Jerusalem.

She said she was finally happy in her new home - a shabby, purple-painted room with pink curtains, four mattresses on the ground and a red blanket.

She clutched a large doll her mother gave her as a gift.

"This is heaven. Because you have always been free, you don't appreciate it. But for somebody like me, who has tasted the bitterness of a prison, this is heaven," she said.

Maysoun, who has remarried, refused to give her last name or age.

She said she was so eager to divorce her first husband that when he insisted on keeping their daughter, she agreed.

She took their son because the father used to spray perfume into his eyes. She said he was not violent towards their daughter.

"I was so young when I was getting a divorce. I didn't understand anything. I was just so desperate to be rid of that man," she said.

Ms Melhem described her father as a violent man who also terrified her half-brother and half-sister.

Although their conditions were better, they, too, were not allowed to leave the house when their father was not home.

She said the siblings, who are believed to be staying with relatives, were mentally disabled and were not sent to school.

"Fear, fear, fear - that was the basis of my life," Ms Melhem said.

She said she kept sane by listening to a small transistor radio that her father gave her in the past five years. She was up-to-date with news and current affairs and named her favourite radio hosts.

She said her spirits had been lifted when she heard on her radio that her astrological sign was Leo, meaning she had a fiery personality.

Over the years the family moved twice more. Each time she was locked up. In her final home in Qalqiliya, she was kept in what she described as a bathroom measuring 1x1 metres.

She dreamed of fleeing but Ms Melhem said her father threatened to rape her until she became pregnant if she tried to escape.

Then he warned he would kill her and justify the crime by saying that she had shamed the family.

She said when he was angry, he regularly beat her with electric cables and sticks. He poured cold water on her when she asked for her mother and sometimes shaved her head and eyebrows. He gave her bread, oil and an apple every day.

At one point, her father gave her a razor blade, telling her it would be better if she killed herself.

Ms Melhem said her stepmother urged her to do it, telling her she was a nobody.

To cope, Ms Melhem often jumped up and down for exercise, cleaned the bathroom, dusted off her blanket, washed her clothes and then listened to the radio all day.

Hala Shreim, a social worker who accompanied police on the rescue, said Ms Melhem was found in the small bathroom with a tiny window.

She said the woman was wrapped in a blanket and wore threadbare clothes so old that they were disintegrating.

When she was taken outside, Ms Melhem said she was blinded by the pale winter sun. It was more sunlight than she had seen in 10 years.

"Is that the sun? Is that the sun I was dreaming of?" she asked police. Ms Melhem said the sight of so many people startled her. "Are those the people I was hearing on the radio?" she asked the police.

She said her first request, after she was released, was for hard candy - something she had been denied since she was a child. Then she asked to see her mother.

Ms Melhem's mother, who moved to a different town, had asked about her daughter, but her ex-husband would make up excuses as to why the young woman was not around and sometimes told the mother to mind her own business, said Ms Shreim, the social worker.

Ms Melhem said she paid special attention to mental health programmes on Palestinian radio.

She believes that listening to voices from the outside world, modest exercise and eating an apple each day saved her.

Although she has nothing more than an elementary school education, she hopes to study psychology and one day treat people who had similar fates.

"There is no house in the world - look outside the window. In every house, somebody is suffering."

When asked if she hoped to marry, Ms Melhem was visibly upset.

"If the violence I experienced was between a father and a daughter, what happens between a man and a wife? No, I never want to marry."

Mica

Director: Ismael Ferroukhi

Stars: Zakaria Inan, Sabrina Ouazani

3 stars

RESULTS

Bantamweight:
Zia Mashwani (PAK) bt Chris Corton (PHI)

Super lightweight:
Flavio Serafin (BRA) bt Mohammad Al Khatib (JOR)

Super lightweight:
Dwight Brooks (USA) bt Alex Nacfur (BRA)

Bantamweight:
Tariq Ismail (CAN) bt Jalal Al Daaja (JOR)

Featherweight:
Abdullatip Magomedov (RUS) bt Sulaiman Al Modhyan (KUW)

Middleweight:
Mohammad Fakhreddine (LEB) bt Christofer Silva (BRA)

Middleweight:
Rustam Chsiev (RUS) bt Tarek Suleiman (SYR)

Welterweight:
Khamzat Chimaev (SWE) bt Mzwandile Hlongwa (RSA)

Lightweight:
Alex Martinez (CAN) bt Anas Siraj Mounir (MAR)

Welterweight:
Jarrah Al Selawi (JOR) bt Abdoul Abdouraguimov (FRA)

Scoreline

Syria 1-1 Australia

Syria Al Somah 85'

Australia Kruse 40'

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Round 2: January 22-23, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 3: February 7-9, Dubai Autodrome – Dubai
 
Round 4: February 14-16, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
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March 4-8: First Test, Rawalpindi  

March 12-16: Second Test, Karachi 

March 21-25: Third Test, Lahore

March 29: First ODI, Rawalpindi

March 31: Second ODI, Rawalpindi

April 2: Third ODI, Rawalpindi

April 5: T20I, Rawalpindi

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