Bondi bravery: Lifeguards, a ‘superhero’ mum and a couple who died fighting

Bondi bravery: Lifeguards, a ‘superhero’ mum and a couple who died fighting

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Tiffanie Turnbulland

Tabby Wilson,Sydney

‘An absolute superhero’: father describes how Jess saved his daughter

When bullets began flying at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on Sunday, strangers Wayne and Jessica found themselves in the same nightmare scenario. They couldn’t find their three-year-olds.

In the chaos, separately, they desperately scanned the green. People who’d gathered to celebrate the first day of Hanukkah screamed and ducked. Others ran. Some didn’t make it far.

The 10-odd minutes that followed were the longest of their lives.

Wayne’s body was acting as a human shield for his eldest daughter, but his mind was elsewhere: with his missing child Gigi.

“We had to wait all that time for the gunshots to stop. It felt like eternity,” he tells the BBC.

Unbeknown to him, Jessica’s gaze had caught on a little girl in a rainbow skirt, confused, scared and alone – calling out for her mummy and daddy.

The pregnant mother couldn’t protect her own child, so in that moment she decided she’d protect this one. She smothered Gigi’s body with her own, and uttered “I’ve got you”, over and over again. They could feel the moment a woman about a metre away was shot and killed.

By the time the air finally fell silent, Wayne had become all but convinced Gigi was dead.

“I was looking amongst the blood and the bodies,” he says, growing emotional.

“What I saw – no human should ever see that.”

Eventually, he caught a glimpse of a familiar colourful skirt and found his daughter, stained in red – but okay, still shrouded under Jessica. Her son too would soon be found, unharmed.

“She said she’s just a mother and she acted with mother instincts,” Wayne says.

“[But] she’s a superhero. We’ll be indebted to her for the rest of our lives.”

It is one of the incredible accounts of selflessness and courage that have emerged from one of Australia’s darkest days.

Declared a terror attack by police, it is the deadliest in Australian history. Dozens were injured and 15 people – including a 10-year-old girl – were killed by the two gunmen, who police say were inspired by the jihadist group Islamic State (IS).

Watch: Bondi hero Ahmed Al Ahmed gifted A$2.5m (£1.24m) in his hospital bed

More people undoubtedly would have been harmed if it weren’t for Ahmed al Ahmed.

A Syrian-Australian shop owner, he’d been having coffee nearby when the shooti
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