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Veteran who survived leap from burning plane hopes to inspire with survival tale

Former SAS trooper Jamie Hull was seriously injured when he jumped from a plane that caught fire during training and was about to crash.

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A former SAS trooper who was severely injured after jumping from a burning plane has said he hopes people will “take strength” from his story.

Jamie Hull, who lives in London, is releasing a book about his experiences after he was given a 5% chance of survival.

The 45-year-old told the PA news agency that the book is “ultimately about having the will to survive and that will to win and fight back to some semblance of normality”.

He suffered 63% third- and fourth-degree burns to his body, and remained in hospital for a total of two years.

The former SAS trooper has now written a book titled Life On A Thread about his accident, the aftermath and his recovery, and his achievements since.

“It was a significant ordeal to myself at the time,” he told PA.

“I spent all in all two years in the hospital as an in-patient … through the help of some expert medical intervention from 2007 to 2009, I was able to crawl back from the brink.”

SAS veteran Jamie Hull met the Duke of Sussex at the Help For Heroes gym at Tedworth House in Tidworth, Wiltshire (Jamie Hull/PA)

The veteran has run two marathons, undertaken a 3,000-mile bicycle race across America, and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro.

He told PA: “Many people have sustained difficulty in their own lives and indeed the pandemic has brought about its own difficulties and challenges for a lot of us.

“I think people would be interested to read the story, they could take strength from it and hopefully they will feel some happy sentiment going forwards.”

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