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Westminster Bridge attack survivor Aves living his dream

LONDON : When Metropolitan Police officer Kris Aves came out of an induced coma eight days after being mown down by a speeding driver on Westminster Bridge in an attack that left five dead in 2017 he faced up to the reality of never walking again.

Any idea of continuing his golfing hobby would have seemed impossible then, but six years later Aves teed it up in the R&A's inaugural G4D Open at Woburn, near London, on Wednesday.

The event, run in partnership with the DP World Tour, features around 80 of the world's best golfers with disabilities, competing in nine categories over 54 holes.

Aves, who was paralysed from the waist down after being struck by the SUV driven by Islamist Khalid Masood, competes in the seated category thanks to a mobility device called a ParaGolfer that lifts him into an upright position.

The 41-year-old still faces daily battles with severe spasms and nerve pains and describes the difficulty of golf shots without being able to turn his legs or hips.

But his determination to return to the sport he loves has made a dream come true by playing the G4D Open.

"I used to play able-bodied golf for the Societies with the Met Police, but then I was injured in 2017 in the Westminster Bridge terrorist attack, and I didn't think I would ever play golf again," Aves said on the eve of the event.

A fundraising campaign in his local pub in Barnet allowed Aves to buy a 17,000 pounds ParaGolfer device.

"Thanks to ParaGolfer I was able to take my first shot as a disabled golfer, and it brought tears to my eyes," he said.

"I used to travel around to other golf clubs with the ParaGolfer. Then, six months to a year ago, I'm thinking that I'm going to do something, and never did.

"So when this event came around, I said, that's it,

Read more on channelnewsasia.com