What would YOU do…if a terrorist is standing RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU? And you comprehend that fact after something has JUST HAPPENED?
Read this….
Original Source
‘I saw the wire and it hit me: he’s a suicide bomber’
July 23, 2005
A COMMUTER who rushed to help a Tube passenger he thought had been shot only realised when he saw wire sticking out of the man’s T-shirt that he was “staring into the eyes” of a potential suicide bomber.
Abisha Moyo, 28, a Zimbabwe-born business analyst, told the Daily Mail newspaper that he was on his mobile phone on the Tube near Shepherds Bush station in west London when he heard a noise like a pistol shot.
“I turned around and there was a man lying on the ground with his arms outstretched in a Jesus Christ position, lying on top of a medium-sized black and green rucksack, face up,” he said.
“I thought he might have been shot. I went up to him and said: ‘Are you all right mate?’ But he just ignored me and kept his eyes shut.”
The man was about 19 or 20, of mixed race, and was clean-shaven and smartly dressed, Mr Moyo said.
“The rucksack was ripped at the bottom, with some sort of muslin showing and some gooey lard coming out of it. I could see what looked like a pressurised canister or tube and there was a strong smell of vinegar,” he said.
Mr Moyo said he moved to the next carriage and the man sat up. “He looked dazed and confused and very shaken … He sat down in our carriage very briefly and then walked back again. As he did, I could see some wire sticking out of his T-shirt.
“It looked a bit like the wire for some headphones, but I could see the exposed copper at the end. It was then it hit me and I thought ‘Oh my god, he’s a suicide bomber’.”
Mr Moyo said the man abandoned his rucksack and leapt on to the tracks.
Witnesses also saw suspects at other blast sites around London.
Sofiane Mohellavi, 35, was reading his book on the train at Warren Street when the carriage filled with the stench of burning rubber.
“Suddenly, people started screaming and were walking on each others’ backs trying to get out of there,” he said. “I couldn’t move, I didn’t know what to do, whether to run or not.”
Tariq Khan was in bed with the flu when he realised the normally busy, noisy street outside his flat in Hackney had gone quiet. A friend called to tell him that a bus parked opposite his home had a bomb on board.
“It was like a scene from (the movie) 28 Days Later, when the man goes outside and everyone has gone,” Mr Khan said. “There was just the 26 bus opposite, with its hazard lights on. Nothing else at all.”






















