A dad blasted with a double-barrelled shotgun told a jury he thought he would die when the weapon was pointed at him again.

Asif Khan was re-living the moment when he was confronted by a hooded gunman in a dark alleyway near his home.

Mr Khan, 27, of Parkside Road, West Bowling, Bradford, said he was shot in the back and right arm as he half-turned to face his assailant.

After he was hit he jogged on as best he could, fearing that the second barrel was about to be discharged towards him.

"I thought he was going to kill me because he then came up very close," Mr Khan said yesterday at Leeds Crown Court.

He told how the gun was pointed at him from about six feet away but his attacker then fled down the alley.

Mr Khan, a window installer, said he recognised the gunman as Amjad Khan, 20, of New Cross Street, West Bowling.

Khan, then 19, denies attempting to murder Mr Khan on July 17 last year.

He pleads not guilty to an alternative charge of inflicting grievous bodily harm and further denies having a firearm with intent to commit murder and having a firearm with intent to cause serious wounding.

Amjad Khan says he was in Lindley Road, about a mile away, when Mr Khan was shot.

Mr Khan told the court he had known Amjad for at least ten years and knew the defendant had the nickname 'Bujo'.

He said that several weeks before the shooting he and Amjad had been involved in a road-rage incident in New Cross Street.

He alleged that Amjad had "cut him up" when his baby son was in the car and the two had exchanged words.

Mr Khan said Amjad had threatened to shoot him.

He saw the defendant on many occasions after that and every time he made the shape of a gun with his hand as he drove past, Mr Khan said.

Mr Khan said he was with three friends in Parkside Road after 9pm when a man shouted to him: "It's me, Bujo. You're dead."

Mr Khan said he recognised Amjad's voice and saw the defendant running across the road towards him holding a long, black object.

"I just ran for my life," Mr Khan told the jury.

He said that Amjad was wearing a hooded top pulled over his mouth so that only his nose and eyes were visible.

But just before he shot him the clothing slipped down to reveal his face, Mr Khan said.

Mr Khan told how he was left lying on the floor by some iron gates.

"I was in a lot of pain, shock," he said. "I thought I was going to die."

Mr Khan said he was bleeding and could not move.

Friends phoned for an ambulance but when it did not arrive his brother took him to hospital where he had surgery to remove shotgun pellets.

The trial continues.