Arena bombing survivor climbs mountain in wheelchair

Martin Hibbert wanted to ‘move mountains’ to get more help for disabled people
EMBARGOED TO 0001 TUESDAY MARCH 16 Undated handout photo of Martin Hibbert, 44, who is planning to use a custom-built handbike to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, to raise money for others with spinal injuries. Mr Hibbert was paralysed from the waist down when he and his teenage daughter were among the hundreds injured in Manchester Arena bombing attack on May 22 2017. Issue date: Tuesday March 16, 2021. Martin is planning to take a Paralympic torch from the London Games to the top of Africa???s highest mountain in September and hopes to raise ??1 million for the Spinal Injuries Association. See PA story CHARITY Spinal. (Cloud Force Marketing/Sam Manton/PA) NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
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Pat Hurst13 June 2022

A father left paralysed in the Manchester Arena bombing has conquered the summit of Africa’s highest mountain in his wheelchair.

Martin Hibbert, 45, launched the mission to scale Mount Kilimanjaro as he wanted to “move mountains” for disabled people.

He has already raised around half of the £1 million target of donations to fund the Spinal Injuries Association.

Mr Hibbert, from Chorley, Lancashire, and his daughter Eve, then aged 14, were six metres away from suicide bomber Salman Abadi when he detonated his device five years ago last month.

Mr Hibbert suffered a severed spinal cord from shrapnel in the bombing which left 22 dead and hundreds injured.

He reached the top of Mount Kilimanjaro this weekend with the aid of a personal team of helpers and local guides and porters.

They broke into singing and dancing after a gruelling trek to the top of the 5,685m (18,652ft) high snow-capped summit in Tanzania.

Mr Hibbert said: “I could just see the sign at the top. I didn’t know whether to laugh, cry … it was such a relief to get there and know that we had done it. Something I will always remember. Just so proud.

“I said we will all come back as different people and I certainly will do, just the love and that. I’m definitely a different person going home and I think everyone else will be as well.

“You know it doesn’t stop here, we’ve climbed a mountain but we now need to move mountains to get what we need in terms of social care change, changes in accessibility, things like that, so I’m going to need all these people to continue giving me that love and support.”

Martin Hibbert (centre) and team training before climbing Mount Kilimanjaro (Ollie Buncombe/Spinal Injuries Association/PA)
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“That’s why I’m doing this to show, don’t write off somebody because they’re in a wheelchair, look at what they can do when they’ve got the right help and support, they can climb Mount Kilimanjaro.

“Hopefully, doing this has highlighted just how important help and support is.”

At the summit Martin spread some of his mother Janice’s ashes. She died in November last year, and Martin said: “I said she was going to be with me. Love you mum.”

Nik Hartley, chief executive of the Spinal Injuries Association, told BBC Breakfast: “It’s important to understand, there’s the physical feat of going up a mountain.

“But this isn’t a disabled man goes up a mountain with a wheelchair, this is a man (who) says, I’m coming out of something terrible and I’m going to do something that can change the lives of people who can’t even leave their bedrooms because of a spinal chord injury.

“It’s incredible, it’s about mental as well as physical.”

To donate, go to martins-mountain.justgiving-sites.com/.

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