John McCarthy (journalist)

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John Patrick McCarthy CBE (born November 26, 1956) is a British journalist who was kidnapped by Islamic Jihad terrorists in Lebanon in April 1986, and held hostage for more than five years.

McCarthy, of Irish Catholic extraction, is known as Britain's longest-held hostage in Lebanon, having spent over five years in captivity until his release on August 8, 1991. He shared a cell with the Northern Irish Protestant, Brian Keenan, for several years.

He was appointed a Commander of the British Empire in 1992. He sailed around the coast of Britain with Sandi Toksvig in 1995, making a BBC documentary TV series and a book of the experience.

He attended Haileybury College, a public school in Hertfordshire.

His former fiancée Jill Morrell had campaigned for his release and public expectations of a re-kindling of the romance between them were high. The couple wrote a book together about his ordeal but they separated amicably in 1994. McCarthy married Anna Ottewill in April 1999.

  • He is currently presenting episodes of the BBC Radio 4 travel programme Excess Baggage.
  • The Stiff Little Fingers song Beirut Moon was inspired by John McCarthy's ordeal. It criticized the government for not acting to free him and was subsequently withdrawn from sale [1].
  • In the first Christmas special of the British comedy programme The Office, David Brent (played by Ricky Gervais) explains how he would like to be interviewed by Michael Parkinson. His agent then says that Parkinson only interviews people who have done things. To which Brent replies "He had that guy in Lebanon who spent years chained to a radiator, what did he do? Nothing! He was chained to a radiator!" Referring to John McCarthy.

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