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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Ryan Hooper & Sam Elliott-Gibbs

Screams of "he's not going to make it" after terrorist went on knife rampage

One of the victims of a terror attack in London feared he would bleed to death after overhearing someone say 'he's not going to make it'.

The man heard the terrifying comment after being put into an ambulance following the attack by Sudesh Amman on Streatham High Road last year.

Amman went on a 62-second stabbing rampage after stealing a knife from a shop in south London and knifed two members of the public at random. They both survived the attack.

The 20-year-old then charged at police before being shot by officers in February last year.

One of the victims has spoken at the inquest into his death.

He feared he would bleed to death after being stabbed by the recently released convicted jihadi.

The inquest into the death of Sudesh Amman continues at the Royal Courts of Justice (PA)

Sections of their police statements were read to inquest jurors at the Royal Courts of Justice on Thursday, although, in a highly unusual move, their names were not mentioned during the hearing.

The man told police: "I didn't realise I had been stabbed until I saw the blood.

"I felt something on my right-hand side, blood was spurting out and hitting my hand. I couldn't breathe when the knife went in.

"I looked but couldn't believe it until I saw the blood hitting my hand and realised it was me."

One of the victims of the terror attack has spoken (PA)

The man said he walked three or four metres before falling over, at which point he was tended to by two passers-by, Katherine Day and Thomas Baldwin, who began performing first aid.

He said: "They cut off my clothes, they saved my life. I will never forget.

"The woman was crying saying: 'Please don't go, where's the ambulance?' It really hurt when they put me on the ambulance bed. I heard someone say: 'We can't drive, he's not going to make it.'

"Then I don't remember anything until the hospital. I was awake until they put the mask on me.

Amman went on a 62-second stabbing rampage last year (PA)

"I didn't see the person who did this because they came from behind. I would have no idea why someone would do this to me."

He added: "Thank God for the doctors, or I would be dead."

The man said he suffered five wounds including those from surgery, and could not lift things or turn his head properly following the stabbing.

The female victim was walking north just ahead of Amman when he ran out of the shop with the knife.

She told police: "All of a sudden I felt someone push me with their body on my shoulder, it was like someone pushing through a crowd.

"I looked towards my left shoulder, I remember seeing an Asian man's face. I suddenly felt pain in my right shoulder towards my upper back.

CCTV images show Amman walking along Streatham High Road before attacking two people (PA)

"I took about four steps forward when I heard people shout: 'She's been stabbed.'

"I thought if I had been stabbed, why were people walking past me? I doubted myself. Due to the pain I dropped my bike onto the floor.

"As I went into the kneeling position on the pavement I heard shots. I was scared because I thought they would shoot us, so I hid behind my bike."

The woman, named in reports at the time as Monika Luftner, suffered a 2cm (1in) wound to her back and was sent home from hospital later that day.

Amman had only been released from Belmarsh prison 10 days earlier after serving part of a 40-month sentence for terror offences, despite pleas from police and MI5 to detain him for longer amid concerns that he remained a danger to the public.

Amman, who was of Sri Lankan descent and was raised in Coventry and Birmingham before moving to Harrow in north-west London, was seen buying four small bottles of Irn Bru, some parcel tape and kitchen foil from a nearby Poundland on January 31.

It prompted police to call an emergency meeting at which it was decided to ramp up security rather than arrest him amid fears that he might use the materials to fashion a suicide belt.

Amman struck two days later and was found to be wearing a "crude" explosive device replica, made out of the items he bought at Poundland.

The inquest was adjourned until Friday.

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