Betancourt savours freedom and heads for France

In her first hours of freedom, Ingrid Betancourt held her children tight, visited her father’s grave and sent her husband out to find oranges for breakfast.

Betancourt savours freedom and heads for France

In her first hours of freedom, Ingrid Betancourt held her children tight, visited her father’s grave and sent her husband out to find oranges for breakfast.

“Last night was very beautiful,” her husband Juan Carlos Lecompte said at the apartment of Ms Betancourt’s mother. “We talked all night long. We haven’t slept.”

After six years as a prisoner of Colombia’s rebels, the former presidential candidate rushed onto the plane that brought her children from France and threw her arms around Lorenzo, 19, and Melanie, 22.

“They’re my babies. They’re my pride and my reason for living, my light, my moon, my stars,” Ms Betancourt said, holding their heads close as they planted kisses on her cheeks.

While the three Americans rescued with Ms Betancourt stayed out of sight in a military hospital in Texas, television cameras followed Ms Betancourt everywhere, and adoring Colombians gathered in the streets to shower her with applause.

Ms Betancourt emerged with a pallid complexion from years living under the forest canopy, but she beamed as she stood arm-in-arm with her children.

“Nirvana, paradise – that must be very similar to what I feel at this moment,” said Ms Betancourt, 46. “It’s like being born again.”

She and her family also visited the church that holds the remains of her father, who died while she was in captivity.

“God helped me during all these years,” said Ms Betancourt, who carried just a few items with her out of the jungle: a wooden rosary intricately wrapped in yarn that she made in captivity, a wristband she wove for her husband, and a knapsack with a dictionary she had begged the rebels to let her keep.

“It weighs a ton,” she said.

A dual French-Colombian citizen who grew up in Paris, Ms Betancourt departed with her family late last night on a flight for France, where she plans to meet French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who had pressed for her liberation. Then she plans to relax with her children.

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