Manchester Arena attack survivor preparing for charity climb
- Published
A father who was paralysed in the Manchester Arena attack is set to climb Mount Kilimanjaro to show how "you can achieve anything" with the right help.
Martin Hibbert was one of the closest casualties to the blast to survive, suffering 22 shrapnel wounds which left him paralysed from the waist down.
The football agent hopes to raise £1m for the Spinal Injuries Association.
"I want to turn an appalling act of terror into a force for greater good," he said.
The 44-year-old from Bolton plans to take a Paralympic torch from the 2012 London Games to the top of Africa's highest mountain in September, using a custom-built handbike for the seven to 10-day challenge.
He said: "We thought we would try and do something within the Paralympic year just to highlight 'don't write disabled people off'.
"We can still do a lot and we are still strong and - with the right help and support - you can achieve anything."
Since his recovery, Mr Hibbert has worked with the Spinal Injuries Association as a trustee.
"I just don't like being told I can't do something or I can't achieve something," he said.
"When I was told I wasn't going to walk again, it was a case of, well, I'm alive, I've still got my brain and my arms and my hands so there's still a lot I can do."
He will be joined on the climb by Rob Grew, who ran into the arena immediately after the explosion to help, and Stuart Wildman, the head nurse at the Major Trauma Centre at Salford Royal who treated Mr Hibbert.
Nik Hartley OBE, chief executive of the Spinal Injuries Association, said: "Too often disabled people are seen as second-class citizens, but Martin's incredible climb is a powerful statement of why achieving one's goals should not be defined by disability."
Why not follow BBC North West on Facebook, external, Twitter, external and Instagram, external? You can also send story ideas to northwest.newsonline@bbc.co.uk
Related topics
- Published29 November 2019
- Published1 February 2021
- Published3 November 2022
- Published17 March 2020
- Published27 March 2018
- Published27 March 2018
- Published29 April 2018