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Description
Mr. Williams talks of the dangerous trips in a soft skin ambulance and the conditions the medics faced.
Transcription
Very tense couple of days and then as the tour went and you’re, three times a week we’re taking re-supplies north and our job just positioning the convoy as we’re going I was usually behind the super tanker fuel so tankers here that supply your gas and everything to the gas stations here. We’re following about forty feet, fifty feet behind him driving at sixty, seventy kilometres an hour and I’m sitting there watching sparks fly off the back of this thing, just waiting for someone to hit him because we had this one area about ten kilometres and it was an alley because the road
was lower than the hill and they were just firing at it all the time, that’s all you seen. And we were told from most of them we were in a soft skin ambulance that we’re not in harm’s way, don’t worry, stuff like that, well what are those bullets supposed to mean then? Even our honey pot, one that would suck all the sewage and everything, he’s dumping one day in the sewage where he’s supposed to dump and he’s being shot at. They thought he was a fuel tanker.