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A man who fell down a drain in London was trapped in a sewer for THREE DAYS before he was rescued.

He is thought to have wandered through the pipelines for up to 72 hours as he desperately tried to get out.

And he was only rescued after people working in nearby businesses eventually heard his pitiful cries for help coming from beneath the road.

Video footage has captured the unbelievable scene in Romford, east London, as the man was pulled out of the sewer on February 8.

Sam Palmer, a manager at Big White Cube Vehicle Hire, filmed the moment, after hearing the victim’s desperate cries for help from outside her workplace.

The first thing he said as he emerged into daylight was: “Does anyone have a fag?”

(Image: Triangle News)

The man claimed he had fallen in up to six miles away on February 5 and couldn’t get out of the manhole cover so began walking along the tunnel.

Officers were forced to pull a manhole cover off and haul the 48-year-old up out of the drain before he was rushed to hospital by paramedics.

Sam said the victim had told police he’d been stuck in the sewer for up to three days.

She said: “When he was pulled out, the first thing he did was ask for a spare cigarette.

“He looked very dishevelled but at that moment, the crowd gave a sigh of relief as we knew he was okay.

“Before that we had all been really worried.

“It was unbelievable, certainly something I will never experience again in my life.”

(Image: Triangle News)

Afterwards officers used the bathrooms at a nearby business to wash their hands following the mucky task in Romford, east London.

Sam was alerted to the unknown man’s plight after a neighbour heard his cries for help.

She added: “We could hear a faint cry for help and we began searching.

“But we were looking up and all around.

“He just kept shouting ‘help’ over and over again but he didn’t say that he was in a drain.

“Eventually we gave up and went back to work, but a while later, two police cars pulled up outside my workplace.

“When they told me why they were here, I took them over to where we had heard him shouting.”

Lorraine Moss, from Romford, was on her way to work when she saw the man stuck in the drain.

(Image: Triangle News)

“Initially, I assumed that someone had been run over. However, as I got closer I could see a man standing in the drain, only the top half of his body was visible and he was covered in dirt," she said.

“It took quite a few people to lift off the cover off and then there he was.”

Witness Stephanie Noe, 29, added: “It was so strange. The man was really dirty and I don’t think he was wearing any shoes.

“He looked a bit bewildered and confused.

“He was saying that he’d been down there for a couple of days. I don’t think he knew where he was.”

A spokesman from the London Ambulance Service said the man was treated for exposure to the cold and injuries to his feet after being pulled out last Thursday.

He said: “We were called by the Metropolitan Police at 12:58pm to Brentwood Road, Romford, to reports of a man found in a drain.

(Image: Triangle News)

“We sent an incident response officer and team leaders in an ambulance.

“We treated him at the scene for ankle injuries and for exposure to cold temperatures and water.”

A resident, who did not wish to be named, but who watched the man get pulled out, said it reminded him of the villain in Stephen King’s famed horror book, and film IT.

He said: “It was absolutely bizarre.

“If I had seen balloons start coming out of the drain, I would have scarpered in case the clown had risen from the drain.”

(Image: Triangle News)

The man told police that he had entered the sewers in Barking, six miles away, three days earlier, but did not offer a reason for why he had entered the sewer system.

But officials from Thames Water confirmed that following an investigation, they believe that the unknown man entered via an exit of the surface water system on a new housing estate, about a mile away.

A spokesman said an engineer checked but could not find any broken manholes that he could have fallen through, following a call from police.

The system carries rainwater from roads straight out to the River Rom so the explorer had not come into contact with toilet waste during his journey.