He had knives in both hands and, upon seeing me with the narwhal tusk, pointed at his midriff."
There, Darryn Frost recalls, was what he thought was a suicide vest.
The civil servant has told for the first time how he confronted London Bridge knifeman Usman Khan, 28, before grappling with him and pinning him to the ground.
Khan, who was wearing a fake explosive device, was shot dead by police after killing Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt.
During
the attack, which began at a prisoner rehabilitation event inside
Fishmongers' Hall on 29 November, Mr Frost, 38, said he grabbed a
narwhal tusk on display in an effort to protect himself and others.
He then chased Khan onto the bridge, where footage captured him and fellow members of the public fending off the attacker.
Mr Frost's identity was unknown until now.
The
South African-born Londoner, who works in communications at the
Ministry of Justice, told the PA news agency how he was attending the
rehabilitation event with colleagues when he heard a commotion
downstairs. He said: "When we heard the noise from the floor below, a few of us rushed to the scene.
"I took a narwhal tusk from the wall and used it to defend myself and others from the attacker.
"Another man was holding the attacker at bay with a wooden chair.
"I ran down the stairs, stood next to the man with the chair, and the two of us confronted the attacker."
'Knives raised above his head'
Mr Frost added: "He had knives in both hands and, upon seeing me with the narwhal tusk, pointed at his midriff.
"He turned and spoke to me, then indicated he had an explosive device around his waist.
"At
this point, the man next to me threw his chair at the attacker, who
then started running towards him with knives raised above his head."
Mr Frost handed the tusk to the man next to him before heading back upstairs to find another one.
When he returned, he found the first tusk "shattered across the floor" and people fleeing the building.
He said: "Along with others, I pursued the attacker, tusk in hand, onto the bridge.
"We called out to warn the public of the danger and, after a struggle, managed to restrain him to the ground.
"At that point I was trying to isolate the blades by holding his wrists so that he could not hurt anyone or set off the device."
In
the footage of the altercation, Mr Frost can be seen pinning Khan to
the ground before being pulled away by an officer - seconds before
police shot and killed the attacker. Cambridge University graduates Saskia Jones, 23, and Jack Merritt, 25, were stabbed to death in the attack.
They were also attending the conference organised by the university's programme called Learning Together.
Mr
Frost said that after reading about the work of Ms Jones and Mr Merritt
he is "convinced they represent all that is good in the world" and said
he "will always feel the deep hurt of not being able to save them".
'Hope on that dark day'
Three others - a man and two women - were also injured in the attack.
Mr
Frost, who has lived in the UK for 14 years, revealed how some of those
hurt refused treatment until others more seriously wounded were helped.
A kindness, he said, that "filled me with hope on that dark day".
He
said he has given his account of the "terrible day" in an effort to
urge people to unite against terrorism and raise money for the victims'
families. He said he was "eternally grateful" to everyone who came to help, and thanked the emergency services.
"Not
only do I want to thank those who confronted the attacker, but also
those who put themselves in danger to tend to the injured, relying on us
to protect them while they cared for others."
Addressing the public, he said he hoped "the part I played in these terrible events can be used for good".
Among
those who were first to tackle the knifeman was a porter known only as
Lukasz. He was armed with another makeshift weapon - a pole - and was
stabbed five times as he confronted Khan alongside Mr Frost.
London Bridge attack: Darryn Frost on using a narwhal tusk to stop knifeman
Reviewed by hafizbd
on
December 20, 2019
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