Austrian girl defends captor as part of her life

The Austrian teenager who spent eight years in an underground cell until her escape last week issued a statement today that defended…

The Austrian teenager who spent eight years in an underground cell until her escape last week issued a statement today that defended her captor as "part of my life".

In remarks read to reporters in Vienna by a psychologist, 18-year-old Natascha Kampusch insisted she did not miss anything during her long ordeal.

She said she understood the "extreme curiosity" about what she endured and how she is faring since she bolted to freedom last Wednesday, but she pleaded with journalists: "Please leave me alone for a while.

"Everyone wants to ask intimate questions, [but] they don't concern anyone," she said. "I feel good where I'm at now."

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Police said today that they had only just begun to question Ms Kampusch about her abduction at the age of ten in March 1998 by Wolfgang Priklopil.

He killed himself within hours of her escape by throwing himself in front of a commuter train.

Although authorities have released photographs and video footage of the cramped, windowless basement cell where Miss Kampusch was kept, she referred to it simply as "my room" in her statement, read by criminal psychologist Max Friedrich.

"It's my room, and not for the public to see," Miss Kampusch said. She also denied ever calling Priklopil her master, even though she said the 44-year-old communications technician wanted her to.

"He was not my master. I was equally strong," her statement read. "I didn't cry after the escape. He was a part of my life. . . . In principle, I don't have the feeling that I missed something."

PA