By

Tucker Reals /

CBS News/ December 18, 2012, 5:06 AM

Richard Engel, NBC correspondent, free after 5 days of captivity in Syria

Updated at 7:34 a.m. Eastern

LONDON NBC News said Tuesday morning that veteran foreign correspondent Richard Engel, two of his colleagues and their security guard were free after five days of captivity at the hands of unidentified assailants in Syria.

NBC said in a statement that Engel, who went missing along with his crew on Thursday, was "freed from captors in Syria after a firefight at a checkpoint on Monday, five days after they were taken prisoner." The network did not identify the others who had been abducted with Engel.

"We are pleased to report they are safely out of the country," NBC added.

9 Photos

Richard Engel

NBC said in its statement that the captors "were not believed to be loyal to the Assad regime," but speaking live on NBC's morning show from Turkey, just hours after crossing into the country, Engel himself said his captors were members of the pro-Assad "Shabiha" militia.

The Shabiha, which translates roughly to mean "thugs," are a network of civilian militants who have acted for decades as the unofficial police force of the Assad regime. They are backed, as is the Assad regime, by the Islamic militant group Hezbollah and by Iran.

"They were talking openly about their loyalty to the government," Engel said, describing his ordeal. "We were told that they wanted to exchange us for four Iranian agents and two Lebanese people... they captured us in order to carry out this exchange."

Engel said his captors were taking him and his crew to a Hezbollah stronghold inside Syria when they encountered the rebel checkpoint and became involved in the firefight.

According to NBC, two of the captors were killed in the shootout at the checkpoint manned by a Syrian rebel group, the Ahrar al-Sham brigade, an Islamic Salafist group which operates across Syria, but has its strongest presence in the northern city of Idlib.

What began as an Arab Spring uprising against the dictator Assad has descended over the last 21 months into an all-out civil war in Syria, fought largely along sectarian lines with the predominantly-Sunni Muslim rebels battling against the Assad regime and its Shiite Muslim backers in Iran and Hezbollah.

Several Western journalists have been detained by Assad's increasingly isolated regime, which has virtually banned independent reporting inside Syria. Others have been abducted and held briefly by armed militant groups fighting against Assad. The myriad rebel militias in Syria have vastly varying motivations -- ranging from nationalist, to purely jihadist.

One American journalist, freelance writer Austin Tice, remains missing after disappearing in mid-August. His parents visited Beirut, Lebanon, in November, seeking information about their son, but said they still had not learned who was holding him or what condition he was in.

The U.S. government has said Assad's regime is likely holding the 31-year-old former Marine, who had been reporting on Syria's civil war for The Washington Post, McClatchy Newspapers and others.

Engel, NBC's chief foreign correspondent, has extensive history reporting on and living in the Middle East. He was reporting on the war from inside Syria when he was captured. His work has won him numerous awards, including five News & Documentary Emmys.

According to NBC, Engel speaks and reads fluent Arabic and can comfortably transition between several Arabic dialects spoken across the Arab world.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Tucker Reals

    Tucker Reals is the CBSNews.com foreign editor, based at the CBS News London bureau.

19 Comments Add a Comment
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mari1963 says:
I'm very glad they are safe, but I think it is crap that all the news media kept their kidnapping a secret from the rest of us.

The media protects their own but never wastes a second in exploiting other people's grief such as Newtown CN. They were broadcasting from that little town the second after the smoke cleared.

The national media are such vultures. I am so glad I no longer have Cable and have internet TV instead.

NBC, CBS and ABC news - They just disgust me!
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rjack61 says:
To Signseeker1717: It's my opinion. You don't have to like it or agree with it. I don't believe everything the media puts out. Apparently you do, so who is really DAFT?
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lawyertom1 says:
Richard is the best damn Middle East correspondent in the U.S. media today.
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RICHIVAREA replies:
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AGREED! TG he is safe.
RICHIVAREA replies:
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AGREED! TG he is safe.
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superdem1 says:
At a time when everything we hear is spun for advantage, and everything in the Middle East is spun to benefit Israel, Richard Engle always provides a no-nonsense exactly as it is type of reporting. He knows who is who, and he doesn't try to "pretty things up." I was afraid for him, so I am very happy he's OK.
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get_down says:
I'm glad to read this article that Mr. Richard Engel and his production team have been released by whichever group in Syria - the civil war-torn country. I thought all along that journalists suppose to be immune from any political elements' aggressive behavior, since their role is to report the news. Apparently their abductors are not too civilized. Well, professional hazard could happen to anyone. Again, I'm happy that I'd be able to see him reporting live again anytime.
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rjack61 says:
If this is true, thank God that he and the others are free. I'm suspicious about the timing. I hope this was not a publicity stunt to boost ratings. With that said, regardless of how well known he is in those parts, his life and the life of the others is not worth risking to get a story. Sometimes too much is just that, too much.
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signseeker1717 replies:
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So you're saying NBC INTENTIONALLY allowed their colleagues to be kidnapped in the middle of a violent, dangerous, unpredictable civil war? For ratings?! Wouldn't they have had to work this out in advance WITH the kidnappers to make sure they were released "in time"? You either watch too many movies or you're DAFT.
signseeker1717 replies:
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A twice-elected Constitutionally-bound President in a democratic Republic with elected officials in a legislative body that includes opposition party members is NOT a "dictator" of ANY kind, much less a "communist". It's pretty tough to be a "dictator" (OR a "communist") when you can PROPOSE ideas, but it's up to CONGRESS to fund spending and pass laws. And a "dictator" typically suppresses and silences ALL opposition, so Fox, Limbaugh and the rest would've been shut down by now, and YOU would've been tracked down and eliminated too.

How can a "dictator" be "spineless"?!

"Communist Dictator" may be your idea of an insult, but if you don't know what either term really MEANS, it just makes you look ignorant.
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credibility2 says:
...some good news for a change...
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Jesus_to_ground_control says:
Cost of Freedom?

The hostage takers probably got what they wanted; citizenship to the United States and the right to use their twisted ideology in association to their deadly assault weapons into the country.
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GossamerWings says:
I'm glad he is free. Please don't send him back there. They may kill him next time.
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mari1963 replies:
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I agree. Stay home Richard with your family. It's time to retire.
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joesapper says:
Freedom is never known for its value until it has been tasted after becoming Free from being detained .

I say if one has a reasonable chance of a successful escape they should always attempt it . Thank the Good Lord , but gee that might involve something to do with Christmass , and the media will have none of that or will they ?
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auburnannie replies:
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Except that this happened in mid-December I see no connection with Christmas. Engel and staff were lucky, but I suspect they might have been comparatively well-treated because Richard Engel is very well known across the Middle East and is fluent in the language (several languages) which helps him understand what's being said about him and his group, and perhaps even negotiate some. All speculation, of course. Hopefully we'll learn more shortly.
BiggMonn replies:
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Well said...on all accounts.
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