Tourists hurt in gold coast bus crash at Gold Coast
Sydney resident Peter A. Taylor was in the bus when it was rear-ended in the southbound lanes of Campbell St between 11.35am and 12.25pm on May 21.
He said he was in a taxi heading southbound when the crash occurred.
„I saw the bus coming along and thought it was on its way and decided to try and jump out at it as fast as I could. It was going so fast, it was so high up on me.“
Mr Taylor said his legs were torn and his hip and back were broken in the crash.
He managed to make it to hospital, but when he arrived he was already in a coma.
„I카지노 꽁 머니 was in a bit of a headspace, there was no time to relax. It was such a traumatic crash.
„I remember being in hospital, trying to wake up my family and friends as well.
„For the first three or four days I didn’t have any blood at all. All I could tell was I would have died had I not been there at the right time.“
Mr Taylor said he still didn’t fully understand the impact on his back when he had just leapt from the bus.
„I would just try to jump up, but it’s not like anything that has happened in my 30s, so when my mother started crying I went straight to bed.
„I was very lucky but it is such a traumatic event.
„I went into a coma. It is all very tragic and I’m grateful for everything I managed to do and to come out of it.“
Mr Taylor’s mother, Angela, who is from the north-west of the country, said she and her wife are going to be going back to Australia on Thursday after her daughter and another vic제주 카지노tim will receive treatment there.
„My family have taken their child to the hospital and the family has left for Australia to be treated,“ she said.
„The doctor had talked to me and she is really optimistic she will 더킹 카지노 조작live and I’m going to have the family come with me on the plane.“
„We have got all our children over on Thursday so I’m going to be at the hospital with them and we’ll have dinner with them and watch them while they’re there.“
The Queensland Health Department said the State Government is providing funding for transport for emergency operations in Queensland.
Dr David Farrar sai