'A bag, a flash, a bang': witness accounts of the Parsons Green explosion.

Terrorist incident at tube station at rush hour caused panic and left many injured. Those at the scene recall the rush to escape on a packed underground train at the height of rush hour, with passengers crammed “like sardines”, no one seemed to have noticed the white bucket inside a supermarket carrier bag placed against a door.At 8.20am, as the District line train from Wimbledon pulled into Parsons Green station, Ryan Barnett, 25, was sitting further down the train with his headphones on. “All of a sudden, hundreds of people were running past me screaming a mixture of ‘stampede’, ‘attack’, ‘terrorist’, ‘explosion’, ‘get off the train’, ‘everyone run’,” he said. Barnett, who works in politics, ran with them.Richard Aylmer-Hall, 53, a media technology consultant, ran too.
He had been “blissfully” reading his newspaper and listening to a podcast on his way to Paddington on the train, which has capacity for 865 passengers, and was “absolutely packed” with commuters and schoolchildren. In the febrile panic that ensued, he heard a woman shouting about “a bag, a flash and a bang”.With the train fortunately at a station, its doors were open. Hundreds joined a panicked stampede to a staircase leading to the station exit. “I saw crying women, there was lots of shouting and screaming. Some people got pushed over and trampled on,” said Aylmer-Hall.Barnett made it to the staircase, but stewards were shouting “stop, stop, stop”, he said, as it became dangerously overcrowded. Everyone ended up squashed on the staircase. “People were falling over, people were fainting, people were crying. There were little kids clinging on to the back of me,” Barnett said.
In the chaos, a pregnant woman lost her shoes and fell over.Olaniyi Shokunbi, 24, a fitness instructor, saw people lying on the floor covered in blood.“There was a little boy. I felt really sorry for him. He couldn’t have been more than 11.He had scratches his head. He was looking for his little brother,” he said.“A woman on the floor couldn’t breathe. People all around were screaming and crying.”Many of those fleeing initially had little idea what they were fleeing from. But those nearest the white builder’s-type bucket had heard a bang, then witnessed a “fireball” and a “wall of flame” shoot through the carriage.South African Gillian Wixley, 36, who lives in Putney, and was eight seats away from the explosion, said: “It wasn’t a big explosion, more of a bang and then there was fire.” As she rushed off the train, she saw “flames going up the wall”. Outside, a small schoolboy aged about 10 was “sitting on the floor sobbing”, obviously in shock and very scared, she said.
Rory Rigney, 37, from Dublin, was also feet away from the device, and saw “a fireball coming towards me”. “It smelled like a fire extinguisher and there was this foam on the floor,” he said. There were “red wires” coming out of the bucket. One woman, who “looked like she had been burnt”, was being helped by people pouring water on her face. As stunned and shocked passengers disgorged from the station’s entrance on to the street, videos and photographs of what Scotland Yard would later determine was an improvised explosive device, were appearing on Twitter. It was blackened, twisted and still in flames. Chris Wildish, who was on the train, said: “It was a white bucket, a builder’s bucket, in a white Aldi bag or Lidl bag. Flames were still coming out of it when I saw it and it has a lot of wires hanging out of it.”Two hours after the first emergency call, the Metropolitan Police declared it a terrorist incident. On Friday evening, NHS England said it was treating 21 patients, eight others having been discharged earlier in the day.

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