Parents of shopkeeper who tackled Bondi Beach terrorist hail him as ‘hero of Australia’
The parents of a fruit shop owner who tackled one of the Bondi Beach terrorists have described him as a “hero of Australia”.
Listen to this article
Ahmed al Ahmed, 43, was pictured fighting a gunman in a video shared widely on social media shortly after the attack during a Jewish Hanukkah celebration on Sunday.
Australian police said a 54-year-old man and his 24-year-old son, named in local media as Sajid and Naveed Akram, were behind the shooting on Sunday, in which 15 people were killed, including a 10-year-old girl and a British-born rabbi.
Sajid Akram was shot by police and died at the scene but Naveed Akram, who was wounded, is expected to survive his injuries and face criminal charges.
Read more: Donations for hero fruit shop owner who tackled Bondi Beach gunman near $1million
As of late Monday afternoon local time, 27 people were receiving care in hospitals across Sydney, NSW Health said.
Six people are in a critical condition, the others are in serious and stable conditions. Police believe the ages of the dead range from 10 to 87.
Two police officers who were injured in the attack are in serious but stable conditions.
Mr Ahmed’s father, Mohamed Fateh al Ahmed, told ABC Australia his son has an “impulse to protect people”, having previously served with the police.
Speaking through a translator, he told the broadcaster: “His friend told him, ‘Let’s go have coffee at Bondi’.
“They got there and were shocked to see armed men firing weapons at terrorists.
“Their lives were in danger. He noticed one of the armed men in a distance from him, hiding behind a tree.
“My son is a hero, he served with the police and in the central security forces, and he has the impulse to protect people.
“When he saw people laying on the ground, and the blood everywhere, immediately his conscience and his soul compelled him to pounce on one of the terrorists and to rid him of his weapon.
“I feel pride and honour, because my son is a hero of Australia.”
Mr Ahmed is in hospital with bullet wounds to his arm and hand, but was in “good spirits”, his family previously said.
His mother, Malakeh Hasan al Ahmed, said she was proud of her son, describing him as a “do-gooder”.
She told ABC Australia through a translator: “I’m proud that my son was helping people. He saved lives, souls. God would not harm him because he was a do-gooder.
“He saw they were dying and people were losing their lives, and when that guy ran out of ammo, he took it from him, but he was hit.
“We pray that God saves him.”