Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin Ex-Marine Imran Yousuf Hailed As Hero In Orlando Night Club Massacre

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jun, 2016 01:50 PM
    A former US Marine sergeant of Indian origin, Imran Yousuf, has been hailed as a hero for saving scores of lives at a Florida night club when a terrorist went on a rampage killing 49 people.
     
    When Yousuf, who was working as a bouncer at the Pulse night club catering to the gay community in Orlando, Florida, heard the first gunshots his military experience fighting in Afghanistan kicked in, according to media reports. As everyone in the packed night club froze in fear, he jumped up and at personal risk opened a back door allowing many people to escape.
     
    He told CBS News television that as panicked people streamed to the back of the hall, "I'm screaming 'Open the door! Open the door!' And no one is moving because they are scared."
     
    "There was only one choice," he added in the interview. "Either we all stay there and we all die, or I could take the chance, and I jumped over to open that latch a we got everyone that we can out of there."
     
    Yousuf - whose mother and grandmother are Hindus - risked his life because he could have drawn the attention of Omar Mateen, who had sworn loyalty to the Islamic State and was carrying out the attack, considered the worst mass shooting in US history.
     
     
    Yousuf said his quick action saved 60 to 70 lives .
     
    The network reported that he cried as he said, "I wish I could have saved more to be honest. There are a lot of people that are dead"
     
    And Yousuf has been modest, brushing off the praises as a hero. Marine Corps Times newspaper reported on its web site that Yousuf posted on his Facebook page, "There are a lot of people naming me a hero and as a former Marine and Afghan veteran I honestly believe I reacted by instinct. ... While it might seem that my actions are heroic I decided that the others around me needed to be saved as well and so I just reacted."
     
    The newspaper said that he had left the Marine Corps just last month.
     
    CBS News identified Yousuf as a Hindu and his name caused some confusion. California-based newspaper India West, which interviewed his uncle, clarified that his mother and paternal grandmother are Hindus and he identifies with their religion. His family emigrated from Guyana, where his ancestors had gone from India.
     
    The Daily Gazette of Schenectady, New York, reported that he grew up in the nearby town of Niskayuna and joined the Marine Corps soon after he finished high school at the age of 17 and served in both Afghanistan and Iraq.
     
    His brother, Ameer Yousuf, told the newspaper, "This was so unexpected but because of my brother's training in the Marine Corps, he was prepared and used strategies from that to do everything he did."
     
     
    Marine Corps Times said he had been awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal during his service.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine
    Three Indian students in Uzhgorod Medical College in Ukraine were stabbed by three Ukrainian nationals

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company
    South African President Jacob Zuma's son Duduzane Zuma has resigned as the non-executive director of Oakbay Resources and Energy owned by the Indian Gupta family

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company

    Canada Faces Tuesday EU Visa Deadline In Long-running Romania, Bulgaria Spat

    It is part of an ongoing dispute in which the EU has pushed Canada to lift its requirement on travellers from its member countries, Romania and Bulgaria.

    Canada Faces Tuesday EU Visa Deadline In Long-running Romania, Bulgaria Spat

    Kathleen Wynne Says Byelection Fundraising Changes May Change Before Other Reforms

    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne says with a byelection on the horizon, fundraising rules around those interim races may change before she proposes broader reforms this spring.

    Kathleen Wynne Says Byelection Fundraising Changes May Change Before Other Reforms

    Pathankot: NIA Court Issues Arrest Warrant Against Jaish Chief

    Pathankot: NIA Court Issues Arrest Warrant Against Jaish Chief
    The non-bailable arrest warrant has been issued against Azhar, his brother Abdul Rauf and two other JeM operatives - Kashif Jan and Shahid Latif.

    Pathankot: NIA Court Issues Arrest Warrant Against Jaish Chief

    Quebec Cops On Un Business In Haiti Had Sex With Locals: Radio-Canada

    Radio-Canada said one Montreal police officer had a child with his housekeeper in 2013 and that he was suspended for nine days.

    Quebec Cops On Un Business In Haiti Had Sex With Locals: Radio-Canada