
‘Commuters thought they were invincible until 7/7 happened'
Getting off the mainland train that had taken him from Hertfordshire to Kings Cross station, Sudhesh Dahad bundled into the crowd of morning commuters heading towards the Picadilly Line.
It was a hot summer's morning with a sense of excitement in the air, as the previous day London had won the 2012 Olympic bid. Amid the buzz, workers determinedly nestled their way onto busy platforms as they did every day, desperate to get the next train.
It was a very crowded platform at Kings Cross, impossible to move. When I got on the train, I couldn't see anything as I was sandwiched between people,' Sudhesh remembers. 'But then, what felt like just seconds after we'd left the station, a bomb went off.'
His train had been approaching Russell Square and without realising it, Sudhesh had been just feet away from the bomber, who was in the next carriage.
The moment the blast happened, the dad-of-one recognised almost immediately it was a terror attack rather than an accident.
'With the UK's involvement in Iraq the terror threat was so high, and the London Underground is an easy target, I knew it was only a matter of time. But like everyone else, I assumed I was invincible,' Sudhesh tells Metro.
52 people were killed, and nearly 800 more were injured when four suicide bombers struck London's transport network at rush hour on July 7 2005. Three of the blasts occurred on the London Underground around 8.50am near Aldgate, Edgware Road and Russell Square stations.
On Sudhesh's train, 26 were killed – the largest death toll of the four explosions.
A fourth device exploded an hour later on a bus close to British Transport Police's HQ.
Despite being so close to one of the bombs, Sudhesh walked out of the station with cuts and perforated ear drums, while others were carried out in stretchers.
'At first it just sounded like a popping noise, but I now realise it had actually briefly deafened me,' Sudesh explains. 'I even started to think I had just imagined it, but then everything went dark.'
The lights went out, and those able to stand tried desperately to move with the crush to avoid falling to the floor as the emergency brakes were hit.
Sudhesh said his survival instinct soon kicked in, and his only thought was getting off the train and out of the station.
'My emotions were completely numbed,' he remembers. 'I didn't even feel any of my injuries, how could I when I saw people being stretchered out near Russell Square?
It felt like a close call. It was at the next set of double doors down and had there not been such a density of people, I would have been more injured.
It wasn't until a few hours later that the scale of the attacks and the extent of those killed and injured were fully realised. It was something the UK had not seen since World War Two.
20 years on, as tensions rise again in the Middle East, Sudhesh fears we might see a return to the conditions which saw the four suicide bombers inspired to carry out their deadly attacks.
'With the UK involved in the Iraq war and growing conflict in the Middle East, the terror threat in London was high back then. Now we are seeing history repeat itself.'
Although not ordering the British military to join today's attacks, Sir Keir Starmer, has said Iran 'can never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon' as the UK watches the US launch strikes on Iran.
And now in an eerie warning to the West, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Washington is 'fully responsible for the dangerous consequences and far-reaching implications of its act of aggression'. More Trending
'It's disconcerting, thankfully not to the same extent as it felt in 2005, but it's still very worrying,' says Sudhesh. 'We tend to think the consequences of war happens only thousands of miles away. But it can end up here.'
Every year on the anniversary Sudhesh helps organise the memorial, but still finds speaking about the attack uncomfortable.
'The more time that passes, the more pressure there is to have done something with your time, and to speak about your trauma,' he explains. 'I never used to talk about what happened too much. There is a tension between wanting to share with someone to receive some empathy, but by doing that you can also feel your identity reduced to a victim.
'But to sound cliche, you really must live each day as if it's your last. Everyone thinks world conflict happens a thousand of miles from London, but it has come here.'
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
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