20-year-old Ahmed Luqman Talib, an Australian (of Sri Lankan origin) student majoring In international Relations at the Bond University, in Queensland, Austalia was part of the group of volunteers on the Mavi Marmara who was shot by the Israeli troops. His story was published in the Sydney Morning Herald.
http://www.smh.com.au/...
Blacking out several times as his captors forced him to drag his broken body up a flight of stairs, pushing and kicking him, the 20-year-old Gold Coast student finally fell through a door. It led to the top deck of the Mavi Marmara, the protest ship on which Israeli commandos killed nine activists during a dawn attack last week.
The trail of blood continued to a ladder, up which Talib (pictured above with his wife Jerry Campbell) hauled himself, to where helicopters were evacuating the injured. But he was given no assistance - despite two gaping gunshot wounds in his right leg.
Campbell and her sister-in-law accused their captors of failing to feed them and of not allowing the women to give water to male prisoners whose hands were bound with plastic ties. And of seeking to destroy any evidence of their conduct on the ship by removing memory cards from cameras - and by threatening anyone who had concealed data discs. Talib said that he was put into a carry-frame in which some Israeli commandos set about dragging him, feet first, up the stairs to the next deck. He was in great pain and still bleeding, but half-way up he had been tipped from the frame and told by one of the Israelis: "You have one healthy leg - walk up."