Over a dozen of students of the Olabisi Onabanjo
University (OOU) Ago - Iwoye, were crushed to death k and others gravely
injured on Friday when a container fell on a passenger bus conveying them.
It was gathered that the unlatched 20-feet
container from a moving truck came off when the driver was driving àgainst
traffic and in a bid to avoid an obstruction at the Sagamu stretch of the
Lagos/Benin expressway, the load tipped and dropped lethally atop of the
bus’ roof.
The weighty container press – pinned the bus to
the ground in the accident, which occurred few meters away from the gate of a
plastic manufacturing company situating near the Ilisha Remo junction.
The vehicles were a truck marked (LAGOS) BDG
779 XE and a Toyota Haiace passenger bus bearing (Lagos) XV 311 MUS.
It was learnt that the OOU students were
travelling to Lagos state for the weekend when they met their untimely death.
The Ijebu – Ode Commander of the Ogun state
Traffic Management and Compliance Agency (TRACE), Tommy Hamzat told
reporters that the driver of the container laden drove against the
traffic.
Hamzat added that the wrong driving made it
difficult for the passenger bus driver to notice the approaching truck and
eventually collided with it.
He explained that the container from the truck
fell on the bus which caused the death of the passengers.
He said: “I was coming from Sagamu and saw the
accident, I have to hurriedly parked my car, ran there to see if the passengers
could be rescued but unfortunately all the occupants were dead including the
driver.
“The bus is facing Lagos, though; I don’t know
where it was coming from. The container truck with no load in it was coming
from Sagamu side but was driving against the traffic and that resulted in the
collision, which eventually claimed the lives of the innocent people.”
Also, the TRACE Commander in Sagamu, Kehinde
Arode, who confirmed death of 12 people, said one person was badly
injured.
Arode however, said that the injured person has
been taken to the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital in Sagamu,
while the remains of the dead have also been deposited at the same hospital
what a loss..
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