The New Zealand Herald

‘Her face was badly burned’

Local says woman he helped pull away from blazing car at first seemed dead

- Martin Johnston

Abrave bystander who helped to rescue a badly burned woman from beside a flaming car at first thought she was dead. “Initially I thought she was gone,” said James Cornes of Te Atatu Peninsula in West Auckland.

The small, grey car caught fire around 8am yesterday on a driveway in Bayside Ave.

Cornes and his wife live about 70m away, in Totara Rd.

“We heard a bang,” Cornes told the Herald. “We heard a neighbour . . . and her daughter [yelling] at me. They had seen the fire down the street.”

He ran to the property and was confronted by the horrific scene: the car was ablaze with flames up to 5m high and a woman in only her underwear was lying beside the vehicle. She was face down and a large amount of skin had been burned off her body.

“Her face was badly burned and the rest of her body was completely burned.”

“A young girl called her name and she raised her head.”

Cornes was told the woman, whom he believed was in her 50s, had got out of the car by herself.

“Others said she was sitting inside the car and it caught on fire. They used a fire extinguish­er. They had already taken the clothes off and put them into the gutter. There were flames half a metre high [coming from the clothing].” Cornes said bystanders feared the car would explode and seemed unwilling to go near, but he looked carefully and was confident the petrol tank was not on fire. With the help of another man he dragged her away. The woman was placed in the recovery position and towels were placed over her, which neighbours kept wet with hoses until ambulance officers arrived.

The police said later that a person had been taken to hospital with critical injuries. They were working with Fire and Emergency to establish the cause of the fire.

An Auckland City Hospital spokeswoma­n said the person was in a critical condition and had been transferre­d to the Middlemore Hospital burns unit. To the suggestion he had acted heroically, Cornes said: “No. Everybody contribute­d”.

 ??  ?? James Cornes says he satisfied himself that the car’s fuel tank was not on fire before going to the badly burned woman’s aid.
James Cornes says he satisfied himself that the car’s fuel tank was not on fire before going to the badly burned woman’s aid.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand