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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

SAD: 2 DIE ON NIGER BRIDGE


 
Niger Bridge, Onitsha
Calamity struck yesterday when a normal occurrence of a traffic jam resulted in the unexpected deaths of two bus passengers.
The duo, who are yet to be identified, reportedly died of exhaustion while trapped in a traffic gridlock atop the Niger Bridge in Onitsha, Anambra State
The deceased, a little child and a middle-aged man, had reportedly spent long uncomfortable hours in the vehicles conveying them to their destinations and this resulted in their deaths.


Vanguard reports:
Vanguard sources, however, said that the deceased whose identities were not immediately known was a minor who was coming back with his mother in a commercial bus from Lagos, while the second victim, was a trader who travelled all the way from the North to Onitsha to sell his goods.
It was learnt that while the small child died instantly on her mother’s lap at the Bridge, the business man died minutes after crossing the bridge to Onitsha from the North. It was alleged that the child had cried for a long time due to heat in the vehicle while waiting to cross the bridge before the mother eventually discovered that her child was no longer breathing.

The bewildered mother was said to have become hysterical as she burst into tears running helter-skelter when she discovered that her child whom she thought fell asleep was actually dead.
The trader was also said to have boarded the vehicle from the North and travelled smoothly until the Asaba end of the Bridge where they spent several hours under the scorching heat in an attempt to cross the Niger Bridge. An eye witness account said that the victim and other passengers with him in the vehicle had already crossed the bridge and was offloading his goods from the vehicle when he suddenly slumped and died.
The Federal Government had repeatedly promised in the last 10 years to build a second Niger Bridge to ease traffic congestion on the bridge which is the gateway from the Lagos and other South-west states to the South-east and South-South.

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