It
has been confirmed that the Ford mini bus that crashed last week
killing the Ghanaian Times Presidential Correspondent, Samuel Nuamah and
leaving others fighting for their lives, was hired to convey the
journalists.
The press corps was returning to Accra from the
Volta Regional capital, Ho, where President John Mahama had attended the
annual convention of the EP Church, climaxing it with a donation of a
vehicle to the church.
A source at the presidency told Daily
Guide that he could not name the hiring company but was emphatic that it
was the Flagstaff House’s Transport Department that hired the GMC
Savanna mini bus with registration GB 506 – 12 at the request of the
Communications Department to augment the fleet to Ho in the Volta
Region.
First Time
According to the
source, the Flagstaff House regularly hired buses to convey media
practitioners to the President’s assignments but the crashed vehicle was
let out to them for the first time.
Interestingly, the source
could not tell whether the Transport Department conducted thorough
checks on the road worthiness of the vehicle, particularly the tyres,
which DAILY GUIDE has learnt, appeared worn out.
The source said
that the bus was hired from Accra and not Ho, the Volta Regional
capital, as initially reported. It crashed at Shai Hills on the
Accra-Akosombo highway when it was returning to Accra.
Camera Crew
The
source also said the accident bus always followed the first vehicle in
the presidential convoy, which was full of camera crew and said the
driver often travelled with them.
He said the driver of the
accident vehicle had been discharged and added that every occupant in
the bus sustained injuries saying, “It was a terrible accident. The
occupants went through a lot.”
According to the source, initially
the presidency was providing a single bus for journalists but incessant
complaints from editors whose reporters were left out compelled the
Flagstaff House to bring in an additional bus.
The Injured
So
far, Ghana Broadcasting Corporation’s Pascaline Amenyo Adadevoh and
Napoleon Ato Kittoe of GTV; Patrick Biddah of the Enquirer and William
Gyentu of Peace FM, are receiving treatment at the hospital.
The rest are TV3’s Edward Frimpong Kwabi and TV Africa’s Mawusi Gboglah.
Mr.
Gyentu is said to have regained consciousness but was yet to speak
while Pascaline, Atto Kittoe and Biddah were able to grant interviews
amidst pain.
Ato Kittoe had most part of his face covered with
plaster while Edward Kwabi had his neck and his right leg bandaged.
Patrick Biddah had some cuts around his mouth, with his jaw swollen.
A
media coordinator at the Flagstaff House, Victor Odoi, who was in the
front seat of the bus, also sustained injuries but has been discharged
from the hospital.
Premonition
According
to some members of the presidential press corps, Samuel Nuamah had
complained of ‘getting tired’ with the job and had contemplated going to
the United States to join his wife Lilian, who is domiciled there.
On
that fateful day, Nuamah, who was said to be sitting at the rear,
reportedly started to jot down his story when they got to Asutsuare and
as a result, allegedly removed his seatbelt. He was thrown out of the
vehicle, dying instantly.
His mother-in-law granted radio
interviews and said that even though Mr. Nuamah visits his almost
two-and-a-half-year-old son on weekends, he ‘strangely’ came to them on
Wednesday, a day before the accident, and even took a photograph with
the little boy.
|
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment