‘It was a war zone’: Emergency responders recount horror of Bondi Beach shooting
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Flowers at the site a day after two gunmen opened fire at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Dec 14.
PHOTO: EPA
Victoria Kim
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SYDNEY – Two emergency responders who were at the scene in the immediate aftermath of the Dec 14 mass shooting in Sydney
Ms Kaitlin Davidson, a 28-year-old nurse, said she saw the shooting unfolding at Bondi Beach from the window of her ground-floor apartment, just across the street from the bridge where the two gunmen unleashed rounds of fire.
“They just kept reloading,” she said. “They had a ridiculous amount of ammunition and multiple guns.”
The two gunmen, whom police identified on Dec 15 as a 50-year-old man and his 24-year-old son
As soon as the shooters appeared to be incapacitated, Ms Davidson said that she ran over to help, as the police were occupied with making sure the gunmen were contained.
Ambulances were having trouble getting to the scene because people had abandoned their cars at the intersection to flee, she added.
One female officer had been shot in her bulletproof vest, which Ms Davidson said she removed to make sure the officer was not seriously harmed. Other people nearby led the nurse to the other side of the bridge, where the Hanukkah event had been taking place.
“It was a war zone,” she said.
She treated about half a dozen people with gunshot wounds to the legs, butt or shoulders. At least one person was shot in the back, seemingly when running away, she added.
Mr David Smith, 25, is a volunteer with Community Health Support – a Jewish organisation that responds to those in medical need. A lifelong resident of Bondi Beach, he was dispatched by the group to head to the scene of the shooting, he said.
He went from patient to patient, assessing their injuries and tagging them based on the priority of their medical need – red for the most urgent, which included more than 20 victims.
People were screaming and children were looking for their parents, he recalled, as some of the injured cried out in dismay that they had done nothing to deserve this.
He was on the scene for three to four hours, Mr Smith said. Because of how tight-knit Bondi’s Jewish community is, he knew three of the dead and three of the injured who are still in hospital, he said.
The tragedy was all the more unfathomable because the scenic beach has been the backdrop to his everyday routines for as long as he can remember, he added.
“This is my morning run, this is my afternoon swim,” he said. NYTIMES

