[imagesource:wikicommon]
A Cape Town trail runner sustained several injuries when he fought back against two men who accosted him while running along Signal Hill.
Gardens local, Barry Smit, managed to rough up his attackers badly enough to scare them off, injuring his knee in the process.
“I put up a fight as best I could. I am just very lucky to be alive,” says Smit. “I was running along the footpath when suddenly these two guys with big knives jumped out of the bushes.”
Smit said a scuffle broke out as he tried to get one of them off of him.
“They made no threats or demands. I’m not entirely sure what they actually wanted, but they definitely were up to no good.”
“We tumbled and wrestled for about 20m down a slope of dead branches, and we eventually came to a stop. It was at this point I was able to pin him down with my right hand around his throat and put him into submission,” Smit said.
Smit says the attacker’s partner was above the pair, but ran off when he saw his buddy was getting roughed up.
“He begged me not to hurt him or break parts of his body when I had him held against a massive tree.”
“For some reason, I managed to take his shoes off and threw them in different directions. I think I was trying to make him as vulnerable as possible before I let him go,” Smit said.
After he let the attacker go, he realised his leg was badly injured and managed to get himself to the nearest Mediclinic facility.
Smit says that just before the attack he ran past a ‘dodgy looking guy’ who might have been a lookout for the thugs hoping to rob a cyclist or runner. Despite hearing about several incidents on the slopes of the mountain last year, Smit says he did not think it would ever happen to him.
“I don’t know where the strength came from, but I was not going to let anything fatal happen to me, so I put up a fight as best I could.
“I am just very lucky to be alive.”
Western Cape police spokesperson Sergeant Wesley Twigg said officers from Cape Town Central police station were investigating a robbery case.
“Initiatives such as awareness campaigns and integrated operations are conducted to provide a safe and secure environment for all inhabitants and visitors in and around Cape Town.
“We appeal to everyone who uses the mountain to walk in groups and to report incidents to the police,” said Twigg.
SANParks also cautioned visitors to remain vigilant at all times and report suspicious activities on 086 110 6417.
It’s still a jungle out there folks, take care of yourselves.
[source:news24]
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