Sun man tells of horrific scenes after attack as panicking revellers leapt over bodies as they fled to safety
I SAW a young woman lying motionless on the steps to Southwark Cathedral with blood pouring from her throat.
She must have been in her early 20s, head facing left while her body and legs slumped in completely the opposite direction.
Her white top was spattered in bright red.
In the utter chaos that was unfolding around her — sobbing people running around on mobile phones, screaming the names of friends and loved ones — she looked eerily peaceful as I stood staring at her, numb with shock.
I quickly realised nobody was really trying to help her.
Instead, people were leaping over her still body in sheer panic while trying to flee to safety — wherever that was.
And then it hit me. The time for helping had passed. She must have been dead.
I turned left and spotted a man lying face down on the pavement just 100 yards along the road.
His legs didn’t look right. For some reason twisted compared with the rest of his body. He was surrounded by three or four people. Judging by the frantic attention to his upper torso, I thought that whatever the issue with his legs must have been it was possibly the least of his problems.
I counted four other bodies slightly further up the road, but felt my attention turn back to the young woman.
I had never seen a dead body before, let alone one that appeared to have come to such an incomprehensible end.
I suppose my mind was just trying to compute what my eyes were witnessing.
Then I felt vomit making its way up my throat before forcing it back down.
“Man up,” I told myself, as scores of people weaved their way in and around me.
We ran as the sound of gunfire started
Ben Leo
Then I spotted a large white van nestled between traffic lights and a wall, its doors flung open as if people had jumped out the back after it crashed.
Images of Westminster flashed crossed my mind.
Close to the van, I approached a shocked Asian man in glasses at the south end of London Bridge.
He looked pale, and his English wasn’t great, but the eloquence of evil knows no bounds. “Van! Van! Terrorist! Terrorist!”, he cried. Just as I snapped back into the reality of the nightmare, a swarm of police armed with MP5 sub-machine guns sprinted up.
“Clear the area now! You need to run!” they bellowed. Within seconds, more police appeared to arrive from nowhere and raised the ante a little more.
Amid the sound of whirling sirens and blinding blue lights, they let out a second more impactful cry: “F*****g move now! You all need to go.”
Brave as they are, I could hear the fear in their voices.
We ran just as the sound of gunfire started.
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Two quick shots cracked out behind me as I joined a stampede of helpless and terrified revellers back down London Bridge Street.
As I sprinted away from the danger, I turned to see police running towards it — down the cathedral steps and past the body of the woman.
Their guns were poised, stocks in their shoulders and barrels facing upwards, their fingers on the triggers.
A police officer comforts an emotional woman at the scene of the attack on Sunday
“Just get out of the middle of the road,” I encouraged myself, before darting into the nearest building I could find.
It turned out to be my office — the one I had so eagerly sprinted from ten minutes earlier in an attempt to get to what I thought was the aftermath of a serious incident.
WHAT WE KNOW SO FAR:
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A van ploughed through pedestrians on London Bridge just after 10pm on Saturday
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Three men wearing fake bomb vests began knifing bystanders and pub-goers
- Staff at one pub barricaded the doors as the attackers tried to storm the building before the three terrorists were shot dead
- Member of the public caught in the crossfire as cops fired being treated in hospital
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At least seven victims were killed and 48 people were injured with 21 critical
- At least two police officers are among the injured
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Theresa May chaired a Cobra meeting before declaring “enough is enough“
- Jeremy Corbyn said he is “shocked and horrified” by “brutal” attack
- Home Secretary Amber Rudd said police believe they have “all the main perpetrators” and are confident they were radical Islamic terrorists
- Police Commissioner Cressida Dick praised the “extraordinary courage” of by-standers
- Cops raid block of flats in Barking, East London, reportedly home to one of the attackers, and arrest 12 as well as sealing off East Ham flat
- A French man and a Canadian are confirmed among those killed
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Police appealed for witnesses
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The Met opened a casualty bureau for those concerned about family and friends. There are two numbers to call: 0800 096 1233 and 020 7158 0197
- All the main political parties aside from UKIP suspended campaigning as Mrs May confirmed the election will go ahead
- One Love Manchester Concert goes ahead as youngsters refuse to let terrorists stop them attending
- Sadiq Khan announces vigil will be held at 6pm on Monday in Potters Fields Park with a minute’s silent at 6.20pm
- Sick ISIS thugs celebrated attack and called for more atrocities
I couldn’t find my security pass in the panic. With two guards staring back at me and a group of other people from the inside, I frantically banged on the glass door for them to let us in. Within seconds they did, but it seemed like a hellish eternity.
It soon hit me that in fact the real aftermath was still hours ahead.
I had been at the epicentre of terror, with the armed killers still darting around Borough Market.
How do you prepare for the horror?
Ben Leo
I peered out the glass door to see yet more people fleeing along the street towards The Shard.
Police soon followed, waving their arms frantically trying to get people away from the danger.
Another group ran past carrying somebody on a stretcher, making their way into London Bridge station.
London was now a war zone. And this was the battlefield.
Turning to look at the haunted faces of others who had taken refuge in the News Building, one girl begged me: “What the hell’s going on?” I had no words for her, only a timid shake of the head.
I tried to head back out of the office a few minutes later but the lock-in had started.
Despite my pleas, I was roared at by a security guard and told to get as high up the building as possible.
My next challenge was trying to put some of the horrific images behind me to help get out the next day’s paper.
In the immediate aftermath I struggled to bury my emotions, regularly welling up as I typed furiously at my desk.
This was the news — and there was no time, at least not then, for sentiment.
I hadn’t expected to see what I saw that night when waking up for work early on Saturday morning.
But even if I knew what was coming, how are you meant to prepare yourself for the absolute horror?
My experience pales in comparison to that of the victims, our emergency service heroes and the great British public who we now know tried to fend off these killers.
Yet it is something I will never forget, especially the haunting image of that poor woman at the steps of Southwark Cathedral.
I hope she is in peace. We have a long way to go.
Drenched by blood of a victim
A SURVIVOR who fled as the terrorists stormed the steak restaurant he was in told how he was spattered with blood from a stabbed diner.
Jag Sandue heard a commotion outside, then people at the tables began screaming: “They’ve got knives!”
Customers began running to the rear of the Black and Blue eaterie in Borough Market.
Blood sprayed on to Jag’s shirt from a man who was butchered behind him.
He said: “There were people throwing chairs and glasses outside. I thought it might just be a fight.
“Then I realised it was more than that, people were running.
“Next thing we know, they’re in our restaurant.”
He said: “People tried to flee to the back of the restaurant, but some didn’t manage to escape the knifemen.”