Ex-Marine of Indian descent turns hero

Imran Yousuf helped over 70 people escape mass shooting at Orlando gay club

June 18, 2016 01:15 am | Updated November 17, 2021 04:05 am IST - New York:

Imran Yousuf, a 24-year-old bouncer at Pulse nightclub, heard the gunfire in the early hours of June 12.

Imran Yousuf, a 24-year-old bouncer at Pulse nightclub, heard the gunfire in the early hours of June 12.

A former Marine of Indian descent who served in Afghanistan, is being hailed as a hero for helping scores of people escape from an > Orlando gay club targeted by a terrorist who killed 49 people in the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

Imran Yousuf, a 24-year-old bouncer at the Pulse nightclub, heard the gunfire break out early on June 12 morning.

“The initial one was three or four [shots]. That was a shock. Three of four shots go off and you could tell it was a high calibre,” Yousuf, a ‘Hindu’ whose family had migrated to Guyana from India four generations ago, told CBS News. That’s when his Marine Corps training kicked in, said Yousuf, a former sergeant who left the Marine Corps last month.

“Everyone froze. I’m here in the back and I saw people pouring into the back hallway, and they just sardine pack everyone.”

Yousuf knew just beyond that pack of panicked people — was a door — and safety. But someone had to unlatch it.

“I’m screaming ‘Open the door! Open the door!’” Yousuf said. “And no one is moving because they are scared.”

“There was only one choice — either we all stay there and we all die, or I could take the chance, and I jumped over to open that latch and we got everyone that we could out of there.”

‘Wish I saved more’ By creating the exit, Yousuf estimated that about 70 people were able to get out of the nightclub safely.

“I wish I could’ve saved more,” CBS News quoted him as saying.

“There’s a lot of people that are dead.”

Yousuf served as an engineer equipment electrical systems technician in the Marine Corps from June 2010 to May 2016, according to service officials. He was deployed to Afghanistan in 2011. He was last assigned to 3rd Marine Logistics Group.

He posted a message on his Facebook page saying he “just reacted.”

“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,” he wrote.

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