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NYC: Praise to Heroes Alerting Police to Car Bomb – including Muslim

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) seeks to recognize the NYC street vendors who alerted police to the Times Square car bomb, which included a Muslim vendor Aliou Niasse and his brother Mohamate Niasse, and Duane Jackson and Lance Orton.  (ThinkProgress reports on Niasse’s religion.)  If anyone has any photos of the Niasse brothers, please email and let us know, so that we can update this posting.

NYC Hero Duane Jackson (Photo: Reuters/Chip East)

NYC Hero Duane Jackson (Photo: Reuters/Chip East)

Hero Lance Orton (Photo: NY Daily News/Giancarli)

Hero Lance Orton (Photo: NY Daily News/Giancarli)

Reuters May 2, 2010 reports:
— “Vendor Lance Orton, a Vietnam veteran, is being credited by local authorities and media with tipping mounted policeman Wayne Rhatigan about a suspicious Nissan sport utility vehicle on West 45th Street near Broadway on Saturday evening.”
— “Several other vendors on that street corner also spotted the car and said they scrambled to tell the police.”
— “‘My brother told me this car has had smoke in it for a long time. Call 911,’ said Mohamate Niasse, 52, where was back in his stall in Times Square after the incident, alongside his brother Ali, selling pictures of the city.”
— “Niasse, who lives in Harlem and has sold his wares in the busy midtown Manhattan district for six years, said Orton then told them he had already sent someone to alert the police.”
— “Duane Jackson, another Vietnam vet who said he helped alert police, was back selling handbags and T-shirts across the road from where the vehicle carrying the bomb had been parked.”
— “‘There are a bunch of us disabled vets selling here, and we’re used to being vigilant because we all know that freedom isn’t free,’ Jackson, 58, told The New York Times. ‘All of us vets here are the eyes and ears for the cops.'”

London Times May 2, 2010 reports:
— “Aliou Niasse, a street vendor selling framed photographs of New York, said that he was the first to spot the car containing the bomb, which pulled up right in front of his cart on the corner of 45th street and Broadway next to the Marriott hotel.”
— “‘I didn’t see the car pull up or notice the driver because I was busy with customers. But when I looked up I saw that smoke appeared to be coming from the car. This would have been around 6.30pm.'”
— “‘I thought I should call 911, but my English is not very good and I had no credit left on my phone, so I walked over to Lance, who has the T-shirt stall next to mine, and told him. He said we shouldn’t call 911. Immediately he alerted a police officer near by,” said Mr Niasse, who is originally from Senegal and who has been a vendor in Times Square for about eight years.
— “Duane Jackson, a 58-year-old handbag vendor, said that he noticed the car at around 6.30pm and wondered who had left it there.”
— “He said that he alerted a passing mounted police officer. “That’s when the smoke started coming out and then we heard the little pop pop pop like firecrackers going out and that’s when everybody scattered and ran back,’ he said.”

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) thanks all of those heroes, law enforcement, and brave individuals willing to defy hate and violence.

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