Three persons, including a driver, Sidi
Abudu, 40, yesterday lost their lives after an interstate luxury bus in
which they were travelling plunged into the Majidun River, Ikorodu,
Lagos State.
59 people were on board the ill-fated bus which had taken off from Aba,Abia State for Lagos on Thursday evening.
It had travelled all night stopping over in Benin,Edo State to pick more passengers.
However,on the Majidun River bridge at
Owode Elede, about 30 minutes from its Mazamaza,Lagos,final destination,
the bus unexpectedly took a plunge into the depth of the water below.
Time was about 3.30am
Some of the passengers were able to swim
their way out of danger immediately, while officials of the Lagos State
Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) who raced to the scene succeeded
in rescuing the rest, save the three that died.
Dead were Abudu, the conductor of the bus and a female passenger.
The accident sparked a gridlock on the road as motorists and commuters set out to go about their businesses.
LASEMA attributed the accident to overspeeding.
General Manger of the
organisation,Mr.Adesina Tiamiyu, said: “The bus skidded off its track,
while on high speed and plunged into the canal.
“Of the 59 passengers onboard, 23
persons sustained injuries. Some of them were treated on the spot by
paramedics from LASAMBUS, but nine persons were taken to the Lagos State
Trauma Centre, Toll Gate, for further treatment.
“Then three persons, including two adult
males and a female,were recovered dead from the water. The bus was also
recovered with the help of a crane.
“The rescue team handed over the dead bodies, their belongings and the recovered bus to policemen at Owode Division.
“Proper investigation would be conducted
on the incident. Motorists are advised to be safety conscious and avoid
excessive speeding while driving, especially when embarking on night
journeys.”
Abudu, The Nation gathered, had gone to Benin, Edo State on Thursday to deliver a vehicle before joining the ill-fated bus to Lagos.
His elder brother, Abu, who was invited to identify his corpse was in tears as he recounted how Abudu met his death.
His words: “I don’t know what to say. My younger brother left Lagos yesterday (Thursday) to drop a vehicle in Benin.
“He was a driver by profession. He
called me when he arrived Benin and said he was returning to Lagos that
same night only for me to get a call that there was an accident.
“ I came here only to see my brother inside a bag. He died in the accident. My brother is dead.
“Yes, he’s married with five children.
The eldest is about 14 years, while the youngest is a year plus. He
lived at Okokomaiko, but no one is in the house now.”
One of the lucky survivors identified only as Nnamdi said the accident happened in the twinkle of an eye.
“The journey was smooth. In fact, some
of us were even cracking jokes.The accident happened in the twinkle of
an eye. We started crying for help, but no one came to us. After over
one hour, I began to lose hope,” online publication,The Cable, quoted him as saying.
He added:”Some of us were praying, some
were just crying. I got confused and didn’t know what to do. It was when
it almost got to two hours that some men came to rescue us. At that
time, three people had died.”
Nnamdi,a trader on Lagos Island , said he boarded the bus in Benin in Edo State.
”I just don’t know what to say. Where would I have been by now? It’s still like a dream,” he told The Cable,” he said.
One Samuel Edeh, who operates an
engineering workshop close to the scene of the accident, said several
accidents have occurred on that same court .
He said: “The driver told us that the
vehicle brushed the pavement so he was trying to control the steering,
but he couldn’t. He lost control and the bus plunged into the river.”
Another resident of the area, Abdu-Ganiu
Adeyemi, who has a welder’s shop on the bank of the river, corroborated
Edeh’s view,saying:”I have been here for two years and I can
confidently state that these accidents have been rampant on this
junction.”
However, an official of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) dismissed the claims as untrue.
The officer, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity, said:”I don’t see any justification in the insinuations
the residents are making. It’s true that the beckoning light, which
ought to flash to indicate that there is a partitioning, has been wiped
off, but the residents are a party to it.
“Let’s assume it is the absence of the
reflector that is responsible for people not seeing the pointer,
showing that there is a separation at that point, but essentially,
there is a speed limit that anybody driving on this road should take
cognizance of and thus drive with caution.
“What we were able to deduce from the
accident is that it was as a result of reckless driving. The driver
was evidently overspeeding. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have uprooted one of
the traffic lights off its track.That says something about the driver’s
speed”.
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