Tag: Safe

  • Foreigners Should Not Be Allowed To Drive Heavy Vehicles

    Foreigners Should Not Be Allowed To Drive Heavy Vehicles

    Dear editors,

    In response to the serious accident that happen along AYE near Benoi, I think it’s time for the LTA and Traffic police to adopt the following measures:

    1. Ban foreigners from driving commercial vehicles, make Singapore commercial vehicles companies come out with good welfare and pay structures.

    2. Install a tamper proof speed limiter on all commercial vehicles and that the speed limiter must be sealed with tampered prof seal and sealing sticker and place at a visible position and traffic police and LTA wardens must be trained to differentiate a working and a tampered one. If a commercial vehicle is found to exceed speed limit, impound the vehicle straightaway and do a forensic test on the speed limiter to determine who is the culprit tampering with it and charge the culprit with an offence either culpable attempted homicide or attempted manslaughter/murder.

    3. Install a track if device on all commercial vehicles and pegged to the Traffic police systems so that all vehicle movement and driver’s actions will be tracked thoroughly, if any mistakes if found, remedial action can be taken immediately.

    4. Stop the import of commercial vehicles with turbo engines and high torque/ horsepower. These vehicles are able of going beyond speed limits and order current vehicle owner with such vehicles to scrap and replace them immediately, or modified the engines so that the turbo can be removed.

    With all these suggestions, it will definitively improve driving habits and discipline on heavy vehicle drivers. Banning the vehicles or restricting them thoroughly is not going to solve the problem.

    Conrad

    A.S.S. Contributor

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Traffic Police: Driving Against Traffic Flow – 1 Arrested, 3 Assisting In Investigations

    Traffic Police: Driving Against Traffic Flow – 1 Arrested, 3 Assisting In Investigations

    The Traffic Police have identified four out of five drivers who were allegedly driving against the flow of traffic recently, police said on Friday (Jan 6).

    One driver has been arrested while three are assisting with investigations.

    A 30-year-old man believed to have driven against the flow of traffic along AYE towards Tuas on Jan 5 was arrested for reckless or dangerous driving, police said.

    The other three are:

    • An 85-year-old man who allegedly drove against the flow of traffic along Bedok North Street 1 towards Bedok North Avenue 3 on Dec 28 last year;
    • A 42-year-old male driver who alleged took a wrong turn against the flow of traffic along Cavenagh Road towards Bukit Timah Road on Jan 5;
    • A 28-year-old man driving along CTE towards SLE when he is believed to have lost control of his car, causing it to spin and hit the road divider, before it stopped in the opposite direction of traffic, on Jan 2.

    Police are investigating another case of a vehicle allegedly going against traffic along Gateway Drive towards Westgate Shopping Centre on Jan 2.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Horrified Passenger: Uber Driver Ate Fast Food, Drove Using Only One Pinky

    Horrified Passenger: Uber Driver Ate Fast Food, Drove Using Only One Pinky

    Uber driver has taken UberEATS way too literally, and possibly landed himself in hot water.

    With driverless cars all the rage now, one Uber passenger certainly felt like she was riding in one, when the driver of the car she was in allegedly controlled the steering wheel with just a pinky during the ride as he ate his food.

    According to Lianhe Wanbao, a reader identified as Ms Xu, 48, was taking a Uber trip from Pasir Ris to her workplace in Toa Payoh, at around 3pm on Wednesday (Dec 15) when it happened.

    “As soon as I boarded, I could smell the oily fast food,” she told Lianhe Wanbao, “I asked the driver to wind down the windows, and he even asked me ‘why?’.”

    She said the driver held a sauce box in his left hand and picked up fries and chicken nuggets with his right, while driving through the entire 20-minute journey, only holding the steering wheel with his left pinky.

    While she could understand if the driver ate whenever the car stopped at red lights, as he might be so busy he did not have time for meals, she was appalled that he was doing so even while on the expressway.

    “It was really dangerous. What if something had happened? He definitely would not have had time to react,” Ms Xu said, who added that she was frightened throughout the journey.

    As she did not want to confront the driver directly, she took a video to lodge a complaint with Uber. She added that she felt like she was onboard a driverless car.

    “At some point, some sauce dripped onto his pants, and he momentarily took both his hands off the wheel to pick up some tissue and wipe off the mess. It was really outrageous,” Ms Xu told Lianhe Wanbao.

    According to Lianhe Wanbao, Uber has apologised to Ms Xu, and will investigate the matter and take appropriate action against the errant driver.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Heartbreaking Decision To Take Braindead Fiance Off Life Support

    Heartbreaking Decision To Take Braindead Fiance Off Life Support

    They were to be married today.

    But instead of having cherished memories of her big day, Miss Khairunnisa Illyasha is left to reflect on what might have been – and to wonder about the circumstances in which her beloved was so cruelly taken away from her just days earlier.

    Her fiance, Mr Noor Helmee Roslan, a 23-year-old Malaysian working in Singapore, suffered severe head injuries in an accident on the Seletar Expressway (SLE) last Friday.

    A day later, Miss Khairunnisa, also a 23-year-old Malaysian, had the heart-shattering experience of seeing him being taken off life support and then laid to rest.

    After The New Paper tracked Miss Khairunnisa down, she said in a phone interview from her family home in Johor Baru (JB): “I cannot believe that the love of my life was robbed from me mere days before the wedding. He is irreplaceable.”

    Her first clue that something had gone very wrong was when one of Mr Helmee’s colleagues, whom she had never met, went looking for her at her mother’s food stall in JB at 5am that day.

    He had photographs of Mr Helmee’s accident.

    In between audible sobs, Miss Khairunnisa said: “Helmee would always message me once he reaches his workplace in Singapore – normally at about 4.30am. I waited and waited that morning, but there was no message from him.”

    Mr Helmee, a bus driver with SBS Transit, lived in JB and was riding his motorcycle to work on the SLE when a car hit his bike from behind at about 3.40am, flinging him onto the road.

    With little inkling how the collision had occurred, Miss Khairunnisa went to Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, accompanied by a friend, and was told that her fiance was unconscious in its intensive care unit (ICU).

    “I was shocked when the receptionist told me that he was in the ICU. When I saw the pictures, I didn’t think the accident was that bad,” she said.

    Miss Khairunnisa was then told that Mr Helmee had been taken to the operating theatre.

    “I just sat outside and broke down, I was really afraid to lose my fiance,” she said.

    Four hours later, she was finally allowed to see Mr Helmee.

    SPEECHLESS

    “I was speechless when I saw him. He was all wired up and his face was so swollen I could hardly recognise him.”

    Doctors warned her that Mr Helmee’s chances of waking up were slim and that even then, he might have suffered full memory loss.

    Clinging to hope, Miss Khairunnisa, Mr Helmee’s mother and his sister, 22, remained outside the ICU in case he woke up.

    “I kept thinking about things I could do to refresh his memory. I thought of pictures that I could show him to remind him of our love when he woke up,” she said.

    That moment never arrived.

    They had met through her younger sister and were five days from their second anniversary of being together when the accident happened.

    “We dreamed of having a big family. He wanted to have many sons, enough to form a soccer club.”

    Hours later, doctors informed her and his family that he was brain dead.

    “My mind went blank in that instant. I had been focusing on the possibility of him waking up. I would cry every time we spoke to doctors as it was never good news,” she said.

    That night, Mr Helmee’s family decided to take him off life support so as not to prolong his suffering.

    “I told his mother that the choice of whether to take him off life support is all hers and I’d respect her decision,” said Miss Khairunnisa, choking back tears.

    “Hearing the long, dreadful beep of the heart monitor was the most difficult moment of my life.”

    Mr Helmee’s body was taken back to JB and buried on Sunday.

    Since then, Miss Khairunnisa has had to deal with the cancellation of their wedding and planned honeymoon. But she could not bear to call the 500 invited guests with the bad news and asked her mother to help her with that.

    Miss Khairunnisa said she will eventually donate his bridal gifts to her – a watch, a pair of shoes and a prayer mat – to charity, but for now, they give her some solace.

    She said: “Helmee was honest, loyal and compassionate. His last words to me, the day before the accident, were that I was his last love, and he could never love somebody else.”

    – See more at: http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore-news/long-dreadful-beep-was-most-difficult-moment-my-life?utm_campaign=Echobox&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook#link_time=1462603901

  • Kids Lose Parents In PIE Motorbike Crash

    Kids Lose Parents In PIE Motorbike Crash

    A day before her death, she shared on Facebook how proud she was that her children could go to the market on their own.

    Tragically, the siblings, aged nine and 10, will now have to face the future without their parents.

    Private tutor Maslin Ahmad Basri, 32, and her taxi driver husband, Mr Jumarie Jumahat, 38, died in a motorcycle accident on Saturday (June 13).

    They were travelling on the Pan Island Expressway at about 11pm when their bike was believed to have skidded near the Upper Jurong Exit.

    Mr Jumarie, a motorcycle enthusiast, had been riding his Suzuki Hayabusa, a 1,300cc sports bike, and Madam Maslin was riding pillion.

    They were pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics.

    The New Paper understands that no other vehicles were involved in the accident.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg