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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
World
Laycie Beck

'Voice in my head said ‘it’s not your day to die’ after I was stabbed, says Nottingham man

A man has shared the lifechanging moment he was stabbed in the neck after another man tried to steal his car keys. Akai Douglas pulled up at The Meadows shopping precinct when he was confronted by a man who took his car keys.

Despite the shock at the incident, he heard a voice in his head that gave him strength and the determination to drive himself to Nottingham’s Queen’s Medical Centre despite bleeding heavily from the wound.

Upon his arrival astonished A&E staff rushed him to the operating theatre and the father of two spent the next five hours receiving life-saving surgery. Speaking about the incident, Akai said: "I was in shock. "It was in my neck. I couldn’t talk and it was confusion. Your life definitely does flash before your eyes. I had an out-of-body experience.

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“I ran to the top of the car park and that’s when it started to kick in that I had been stabbed and I could die. But it was like someone almost took over. A voice in my head said ‘it’s not your day to die’."

He continued: "I was bleeding out of my neck but something gave me the power to get back in my car and drive myself to the hospital. I attended A&E and they put me in a bed and looked at me in awe as if to say you shouldn’t still be here with an injury like that.

"They operated on me and saved my life. Looking back it was an overwhelming experience. But I do believe I’m here for the greater good.” Since the incident on April 5, 2018, Akai has used his experience to help inform national Government strategy on serious violence and prevent young people becoming involved in knife crime through voluntary mentoring and public speaking.

Akai has also offered to become a lived-experience volunteer, where he can help shape the provision of support services for victims of crime through Nottinghamshire Victim CARE, which is commissioned by the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner for Nottinghamshire. Speaking during Operation Sceptre, a week-long national knife crime campaign, the 28-year-old joiner said he felt lucky to be alive.

He explained that the traumatic experience had left him with a burning desire to have a positive impact on other people’s lives. Akai has talked about his experiences at the Houses of Parliament at an All-Party Parliamentary Group, as well as speaking at a youth violence conference with the then-Prime Minister Theresa May at 10 Downing Street.

He is also an ambassador with Redthread, a charity part-funded by the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner which works alongside the health service in hospital settings, including the Queen’s Medical Centre, supporting victims of youth violence.

Akai, of The Meadows, is now talking to the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner for Nottinghamshire about how the Nottinghamshire Victim CARE could be improved in future. He said that while there were arrests in connection with his stabbing, no one was ever charged due to a lack of evidence.

Akai added that he believed his insight could help improve the service that victims receive. Police and Crime Commissioner Caroline Henry said she wanted to use the insight of lived-experience volunteers to help her Office to commission a victim support service that will be designed by victims, for victims.

She said: "Akai is a truly remarkable young man and it is amazing that he survived to tell his story. It is just as remarkable to me that rather than letting it affect him in a negative way, he is inspired by it to make a positive difference to many other people’s lives.

“His story is a real reminder during this Operation Sceptre campaign week that knife crime can have serious consequences and we must all step up to help educate young people that carrying a knife is never the answer. Nottinghamshire Police and partner agencies work hard all year round to tackle knife crime but Operation Sceptre is a great way to put the spotlight on some of this work and to raise awareness,

“We are still looking for more people with lived experience of crime to help us improve the service victims of crime receive. It doesn’t matter what the crime is. If you have been affected by crime and you want to help change how victims are supported, please get in touch.”

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