The Star Malaysia

Homeless men hailed as heroes

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MANCHESTER: A homeless man begging at the Manchester Arena as the suicide attack went off was being hailed as a hero after cradling a dying woman in his arms.

Chris Parker, 33, had been begging in the arena foyer where suicide bomber Salman Abedi detonated his device on Monday.

Amid the carnage and chaos as people began to leave Ariana Grande’s concert, who has a large teenage girl following, he rushed to help victims.

Stephen Jones, 35, who had been sleeping rough near the arena in the northwest English city, also ran to help deal with the aftermath.

Members of the public have raised thousands of pounds to pay them back for their heroics.

A tearful Parker recounted: “I heard a bang and within a split second I saw a white flash, then smoke and then I heard screaming.

“It knocked me to the floor and then I got up and instead of running away my gut instinct was to run back and try and help,” he said.

“I saw a little girl... she had no legs. I wrapped her in one of the merchandis­e T-shirts and I said ‘where is your mum and daddy?’ She said: ‘my dad is at work, my mum is up there’.”

He said he thought the mother had died.

Parker, who has slept rough in Manchester for about a year, regularly goes to the arena to beg for change as crowds head home from the 21,000-capacity venue.

He said he tended to a woman who died as he tried to comfort her.

“She passed away in my arms,” Parker said. “I haven’t stopped crying.

“The most shocking part of it is that it was a kids’ concert.

“There were nuts and bolts all over the floor. People had holes in their back.

“It’s the screams I can’t get over and the smell... I don’t like to say it but it smelled like burning flesh.”

Crowdfundi­ng webpages set up for the men has raised more than £10,000 (RM55,700) for each.

Jones, a former bricklayer who has been sleeping rough for more than a year, recalled wiping blood from children’s eyes after dashing to help.

“It was a lot of children with blood all over them, crying and screaming,” he told ITV television.

“We were having to pull nails out of their arms and a couple out of this little girl’s face.”

Jones said it was “just instinct” to help.

“If I didn’t help I wouldn’t be able to live with myself walking away and leaving kids like that,” he said.

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