Daily Mirror

Pony found in car is thriving at new home

Survivors at service for 2015 atrocity

- BY LAURA ELVIN BY LOUIE SMITH louie.smith@mirror.co.uk @smith_louie

RECOVERY Gary the pony A TRAUMATISE­D foal found on the back seat when police stopped a car full of youths is now happy in a new home.

Charity Blue Cross said Gary the Shetland pony was ungroomed and terrified of people.

Emily Lambert, who helped look after him, said: “No animal should have the start to life Gary had.

“It took three weeks before we were able to start approachin­g him.”

Gary was rescued in Shrewsbury last year and joined Blue Cross in Burford, Oxon, in January.

Louise, 51, and Richard Coulson, 63, took him in six months ago to live with miniature pony Zebby.

Louise, from Lowestoft, Suffolk, said: “It’s rewarding to see him come out of that shell.”

Tony and Justine will be at memorial A COUPLE who survived the Bataclan terror atrocity have returned to Paris on its third anniversar­y in a defiant gesture to the killers – and to finish the sightseein­g trip cut short by the outrage.

Tony Scott, 48, and Justine MertonScot­t, 47, were at the Eagles of Death Metal show where 90 people were massacred on November 13, 2015.

While recovering from the trauma they joined a network of British survivors and they have now bravely chosen to go to the Bataclan and take part in an official memorial service today.

They then plan to visit the Louvre, the Arc de Triomphe, the Champs-Elysees and the Eiffel Tower to tick off what had been planned on their 2015 trip.

Tony said: “We found that once we got back from Paris the world was upsidedown. We didn’t know who or where to turn to and felt so disorienta­ted.

“It was only after we found out about Life For Paris and got in touch with other UK survivors that we realised there are organisati­ons you can turn to.

“It’s like a family connection – so we decided to go back for the anniversar­y.”

Justine added: “We’re going to do some sightseein­g as well because sightseein­g didn’t happen three years ago.”

The couple had booked a trip to Paris and the gig tickets to celebrate Tony’s 45th birthday. They were on a balcony overlookin­g the stage when gunmen opened fire on the crowd.

Yoga teacher Justine said: “We heard shouting and chants and I remember thinking it was gunfire. I was thinking, ‘Is this part of the act because it’s not very funny’. I saw the band run off the stage and the people at the front piling to the exit at the side. I just remember Tony yelling, ‘Get down, get down’.”

IT worker Tony added: “It just kept going and going. And there was a little break in the fire – presumably they were reloading. And Justine said, ‘We’ve got to Flowers in terror’s aftermath move now!’.”Tony and

Justine crawled on their stomachs and managed to escape on to the roof through a skylight.

Justine said she remembered thinking of her wedding – which was scheduled for March the following year – as they made their way to safety.

She said: “The wedding was one of the things I kept thinking when we were hiding, ‘I’ve got a wedding to go to, no terrorist is going to stop us’.”

While waiting to be helped out of the With Zoe Alexander and, inset, her tragic brother Nick HAPPY DAY Their wedding in 2016 Wounded treated on the street building, Tony messaged his ex to tell his 11-yearold daughter “I love you”. He said: “That was the point I thought, ‘I’m going to die’.”

They managed to climb into a block of apartments above the Bataclan and while they were being rescued by police they saw several revellers who had been shot dead.

The Bataclan slaughter was one of several Islamic State-inspired attacks across the French capital that night, in which a total 130 people were killed and more than 400 wounded.

Tony and Justine returned home to Leeds the following day and went ahead with their wedding in March 2016.

They returned to Paris briefly in 2016 but now want to draw a line under the experience by finishing their 2015 trip.

They have been supported by Life For Paris, through which they met Zoe Alexander. Her band merchandis­er brother Nick, 35, was the only British victim.

Tony said: “We’ve created our own support network now, unless someone was there they can’t fully appreciate it.”

Justine added: “We think of them as family but we would never have met them if not for that day.”

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