Bangkok Post

‘I will survive’: Injured innocents recount Saturday night ordeal

Foreigners, hospitalit­y workers and newspaper editors among those targeted

-

The knife-wielding attackers appeared to be leaving the restaurant where Candice Hedge was hiding under a table when one of them spotted her, returning to slash her throat, the 34-year-old waitress’ father told an Australian newspaper.

Ms Hedge, who moved to London last year, had just finished her shift at Elliot’s restaurant and was having a drink with her boyfriend when the attack started, Ross Hedge told The Courier Mail of Brisbane. Candice Hedge wrote on social media that she was in a “bit of pain” after undergoing surgery.

“But I will survive,” she said.

Ms Hedge was one of at least 48 people who were injured in the attack carried out by three men in the London Bridge area that also left seven people dead.

Victims and their families gave harrowing accounts of the sudden and random attacks that sent scores of people out on a Saturday night fleeing crowded restaurant­s and pubs or diving for cover. Others had no chance to react.

Ross Hedge said his daughter was “very lucky”, though “she was terrified, of course”.

The Islamic State group has claimed responsibi­lity for the brazen attack that started on London Bridge, where three attackers drove a rented white van on to a sidewalk and into pedestrian­s. Then, armed with knives and wearing fake suicide vests, they rampaged through Borough Market.

Australia’s foreign minister said Ms Hedge was among three Australian­s injured in the attacks. Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Andrew Morrison received stitches for a stab wound to his neck and was on his way home to Australia. The government is still making inquiries into the third Australian’s condition.

Mr Morrison, an electricia­n from Darwin, posted on social media that he had been stabbed leaving Belushi’s London Bridge bar after watching the Champions League soccer final.

“All of a sudden this guy comes up with a knife. I just, like, push him off. I walk into a pub and I’m like: ‘Someone help me, I’ve just been stabbed’,” Mr Morrison said in a video.

Metropolit­an Police Assistant Commission­er Mark Rowley said on Sunday that a member of the public suffered gunshot wounds as officers opened fire and stopped the attackers.

A worker at Wheatsheaf pub, Fabio Lamas, 20, told NBC News he saw a patron get shot in the head by a stray police bullet as he stood by a window inside the establishm­ent. At least one of the attackers was fatally shot outside the pub.

Mr Lamas said the victim was conscious and “he was bleeding through his eye”.

“I went to get the first-aid kit and I started speaking to his friends and to try and calm them down,” he said.

Daniel O’Neill, 23, had just stepped outside a pub near Borough Market when he was attacked, his mother, Elizabeth, told reporters on Sunday outside Kings College Hospital in London.

“A man ran up to him and said ‘This is for my family, this is for Islam’, and stuck a knife straight in,” she said.

“He’s got a seven-inch scar going from his belly round to his back.”

Also among the injured was the business editor for Britain’s Sunday Express newspaper. Editor Geoff Ho was photograph­ed walking toward an ambulance on the arm of a police officer with a makeshift bandage on his neck. Ho intervened as the attackers tried to knife a bouncer at a pub, the newspaper said.

“Don’t know whether it was stupid or noble to jump in and break up the fight outside the Southwark Tavern,” Mr Ho wrote on his Facebook page, the newspaper said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand