UK Parliament Attack: 'Heard A Thud, Saw Man Lying In Pool Of Blood'

UK Parliament Attack: Heard A Thud, Saw Man Lying In Pool Of Blood
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Highlights

\"I heard a thud, turned round and there was a man lying about 10 yards away from me,\" Reuters photographer Toby Melville recalls, describing the moment a man fell from London\'s Westminster Bridge to the pavement below during Wednesday\'s attack.

"I heard a thud, turned round and there was a man lying about 10 yards away from me," Reuters photographer Toby Melville recalls, describing the moment a man fell from London's Westminster Bridge to the pavement below during Wednesday's attack.

It had been a quiet afternoon in central London and Melville was taking pictures around parliament for stories about Britain's exit from the European Union.

Melville was standing below the bridge on the south bank of the River Thames opposite the Houses of Parliament at around 2:30 pm when the man landed near him.

"There was a lot of blood coming from his head. I thought this must be a domestic or horrible accident," Melville said.

"The noisiest part I can remember is the initial thud which I'm sure was the shock in my mind of hearing the bloke landing behind me. It was relatively quiet, in my mind anyway," he said.

Melville immediately phoned the emergency services and decided to go to nearby St Thomas's Hospital to alert doctors about the injured man. He climbed the steps to reach the bridge above, and that's when he saw other injured women lying on the pavement.


"At which point I thought this looks like it's more than someone's fallen over the wall," he said. Other bystanders were already rushing to help the victims. At the top of the bridge he began taking pictures.

British police say five people were killed and around 40 injured on Wednesday. A car hit pedestrians on Westminster Bridge, and an attacker stabbed a policeman close to parliament and was shot.

"Of a dozen or so people, some of them seemed to be conscious. I didn't know there had been a vehicle involved at the time, someone said 'bus', someone said 'car' someone said 'shooting'," he said.

"It was just surreal and it was a fairly quick computation that this was a serious incident and a lot of people injured."

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