The head of an OSCE team released by pro-Russian rebels in east Ukraine today expressed his "deep relief" after an ordeal that lasted more than a week.
"It is happiness, a deep relief," German Colonel Axel Schneider told a small group of journalists on the road outside of the Ukrainian city of Donetsk.
He spoke as he and the rest of the freed members of the OSCE team were on their way to Donetsk, from where they flew to Kiev and then onwards to Berlin in a German jet.
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They were seized by pro-Russian rebels on April 25 and kept in Slavyansk, where the insurgents at one point made them give a news conference under armed guard. One inspector, a Swede, was released April 27 because he suffered from diabetes.
The rebels insisted that the prisoners -- whom they called "guests" -- would only be exchanged for militants taken prisoner by Ukrainian authorities.
The observers spent the first hours of their captivity in a basement with their hands tied and eyes blindfolded, the Czech observer, Lieutenant Colonel Josef Prerovsky, told Czech television in Donetsk.
"Those first eight hours were the worst," he said.
"We spent the first two days in a basement constantly under guard, accompanied even when we went to the bathroom," he said. "Then they untied our hands and allowed us to move in the basement."
The atmosphere became more tense yesterday, when the Ukrainian military launched an offensive on Slavyansk, with one of the aims to force the rebels to free the OSCE team.
"It was really tough the last two nights as we saw the situation developing then. Every minute gets longer," Schneider said.
In the end, after days of outrage from Western capitals over their captivity, direct intervention from a Kremlin envoy, Vladimir Lukin, resulted in their liberation.
No details of the terms of their release were given.