Xristina had gone to buy a drink from Chaiiwala on Monday, 24 June. She said it was "just a normal, casual working day, everybody was having a lunch break". Then, out of the blue, two mopeds pulled up carrying three passengers. One of them grabbed her motorbike. "I felt like I was being attacked and I had to protect myself, and what's mine," she said. "I've been trained in martial arts and at that moment, my whole instinct kicked in." CCTV footage shows her sprinting out of the cafe and pulling the thief from the moving bike, while the other two mopeds swerved around her and drove away.
Lovely to see these feral thugs not getting away with it, for once!
"One of the other riders kicked me. After, I was thinking, 'What if they had had a knife?' But even if they had, I would know how to react." She then put the thief into a headlock and wrestled him to the ground, with help from a member of the public.
But no help from those paid to apprehend thieves, the police.
Xristina said they subjected her to "emotional warfare", crying and claiming to be forced into the robbery. "He said he was only 12 years old, although they looked like older teenagers to me.
"I was fighting him for about 10 minutes. Eventually I let him go. I felt like I was doing something wrong - he made me feel bad for something that he did."
Well, then, you're a fool. He's a '12 year old' in the same way all those 'refugees' are 12 years old, even the husky ones with full beards.
Although a "supportive" police officer arrived shortly afterwards, Xristina felt frustrated. "If only the police could have turned around and helped me when I needed them most," she said. "Something needs to be changed with the law and the police force. It's like an epidemic. Everybody is being targeted by these moped thieves. "I feel like the system is failing."
Well, 'failing' implies they are at least doing something, so no. It's not even trying, is it?
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