A heroic father has spoken of the moment he saved Claudia Winkleman’s daughter after her Halloween costume caught fire.
Jamie
Poulton suffered second-degree burns when he plucked eight-year-old
Matilda from a group of children and put out the flames with his bare
hands.
His
brave actions not only saved her from worse injury, they prevented her
from setting fire to nine other children crowded on to a narrow
doorstep.
Describing
the terrifying accident for the first time, the restaurant owner said
he was just feet away when he saw Matilda’s black ‘wizard’s costume’
turn into a ‘crackling ball of flame’.
To his horror, the synthetic fabric melted in his hands as he tried to tear it from the screaming child.
Mr Poulton
said his daughter Talulah, five, and son Lewis, three, were left
terrified after witnessing the accident. And he warned other parents who
dress their children in novelty costumes never to allow them near open
flames.
The
45-year-old, who owns Randall & Aubin restaurant in Soho, central
London, had joined Miss Winkleman, around five other parents and ten
children on their annual west London trick or treating expedition.
Although he did not see exactly what set Matilda’s costume alight, it is thought her cape touched a pumpkin candle.
He
told the Daily Mail: ‘Suddenly, Claudia’s daughter went up in a
crackling ball of flame. All the children were wearing the same kit. It
was like a potential horror film in front of me, because they were all
going to go. Once she goes, then the next one catches and they are all
going to go off.
They were
all on the doorstep together, right next to each other. So I just picked
her up and lifted her over the children, got her on the pavement and
tried to put her out.’
Mr
Poulton said time seemed to slow down as he tried to extinguish
Matilda’s flaming costume. Shockingly, the fabric continued to burn as
he patted her and rolled her on the pavement. He said: ‘This material
just keeps reigniting and re-burning. And it is sticky, so it melts on
the skin. It doesn’t cinder. It remains hot. It was horrific to be
honest.
‘I was trying to put it out with my hand. It was a warm night so I wasn’t wearing a jacket.
‘There
was nothing immediately to hand to put it out with. Ideally I’d have
had something like a towel to douse it all out. But I didn’t have
anything. There wasn’t much time to think.
‘I
was trying to roll her and pat her clothes. I was trying to rip the
costume off her, which didn’t really help because it just ripped and
dropped back. It is very bad material. That stuff is terrible.
‘The costumes are very, very cheap to buy. They are nylon and they just go up.’
Mr
Poulton’s bravery left him with severe burns, and a week after the
accident three fingers on his right hand are still in bandages.
It
is thought Matilda has had several operations and may have to remain in
hospital for several weeks. Miss Winkleman and her husband Kris
Thykier, both 42, have said they are ‘hopeful’ their daughter will make a
‘full recovery’.
Miss
Winkleman, who was replaced on last week’s Strictly Come Dancing by Zoe
Ball, will not appear on the BBC1 show tonight and has not said when
she will return.
Mr
Poulton played down his actions, saying: ‘Any parent would have done
exactly the same thing so I don’t think there is anything heroic about
it.’
However,
he admitted his own children have been left traumatised, adding: ‘My
little girl is petrified of candles now. She went to a birthday party
the next day and didn’t want to go near a candle.’ Last night, experts
said children’s fancy dress costumes have to comply with minimum fire
resistance standards set out in the European Union Toy Safety Directive.
But they warned it is impossible to create completely fireproof
clothes.
Elizabeth
Fox, of the National Childrenswear Association, said: ‘All clothes
burn, some more quickly than others. The terrible irony is that fabrics
such as polyester are actually more fire-resistant than cotton, but once
they do set alight they are liable to melt and burn the skin further.
Sadly there is no easy fix except to warn parents when their children
are around open flames, especially in loose clothing such as Halloween
cloaks.’
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