My Escape From
Terrorist Attack At CS Terminus,VT Station In Mumbai!!!Back Home Safely!!Thanks
For Prayers!!
See Link In Times Of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Mumbai/I_had_to_choose_between_either_my_luggage_or_my_life/articleshow/3767019.cms
'I had to choose between either my
luggage or my life'28 Nov 2008, 0116 hrs IST, TNN
MUMBAI:
"He had the look of a man who was trained to be emotionally unattached.
But he looked highly intelligent, well educated and professional.
He even had a very innocent face,'' said Rama Sedhu, 53, who was at the
long-distance train terminus at CST when the terrorists began shooting on
Wednesday night. Sedhu was with three other friends waiting for the Chennai
Mail to take them home.
On Thursday, they remained stranded at the station, their baggage lost. "I
was trapped for about 15 minutes before I could flee. The terrorist looked no
more than 25 years old, was around five feet in height, wore no mask and was
very fair. He had shortish hair and was lean. He wore dark clothes,'' said S
Nagraj. "I had to choose between my luggage or my life. We don't even have
any identification on us and can't travel back.''
When the firing began, Sedhu lay on the floor to protect himself while Nagraj
fled in a few minutes. "The gunman changed the magazine in his gun thrice
and pumped bullets into everyone in sight. He was expressionless. There were
about 60 bodies all around and I thought Sedhu had died too,'' said Nagraj.
Sedhu said that as he lay watching the scene unfold, he became angry at his own
helplessness. "Some of the police were targeted while the others ran away.
People were frozen in fear and there was pin-drop silence all around, except
for the shooting,'' he said.
Re-fresh, the recently opened food court, was sprayed with at least 17 bullets,
which shattered its glass walls. A bullet also hit Mukesh Agarwal, uncle of the
proprietor, seriously injuring him. Riyaz Khan, the manager, looked on from the
mezzanine floor. He said he didn't notice the gunmen until a hand grenade
exploded.
Khan said that the restaurant and parcel depot staff transported several
victims to hospital. "I haven't eaten since last night and I don't have an
appetite. I went home this morning and am back on duty even though my wife
asked me not to go,'' said Khan on Thursday afternoon.
The men said it was an experience they won't be able to get over for a very
long time. Sedhu, who is a sound and recording consultant and rubs shoulders
with movie directors down South, is considering making a movie.