It was a sad scene at Diabene, a community in the Sekondi Takoradi Metropolis of the Western Region, when a truck belonging to DANGOTE Cement had an accident, leading to the death of one person.
The truck with registration number GN 6512-16 had loaded eight hundred bags of cement to be distributed to some retailers in Diabene and its environs.
After loading the cement from the Dangote Ehyiamu depot, the driver picked up four others along the way to provide offloading assistance.
While climbing a mountain in the Diabene community, the truck failed its brakes and started moving at a forced reverse speed. The driver tried to stop the vehicle, but all his efforts proved unsuccessful.
One of the loading boys sitting at the back of the truck, in an attempt to save his life, jumped from the vehicle.
Unfortunately, he fell exactly where the vehicle stopped and had his head smashed by the middle tyres.
“I was standing here when the vehicle came, he tried to climb the hill but could not, so the vehicle returned at a reverse speed. The guy was sitting at the back with three others, he tried to jump from the vehicle before it landed, but the tyre smashed his head on the floor,” an eyewitness, Abu Emmanuel indicated.
The lifeless body of the loading boy whose identity is still unknown could be seen trapped under the two big middle tyres of the truck.
Personnel from the Ghana Fire Service and the Ghana Police Service had to cut through the tyres before the body was retrieved.
“We received a call about this accident, we immediately proceeded to the scene and saw the body of a young man trapped under the tyres of the vehicle. We were also told three others and the driver survived with minor injuries. The position of the deceased made it difficult for us to succeed in the rescue mission. With the help of community members, we finally retrieved the body. We always advise people to stop sitting at the back of these trucks because anything can happen,” ADO1 Peter Dadzie, leader of the rescue mission from the Ghana National Fire Service, told Connect FM’s Omanbapa Morning Show team.
Mr. Adu, one of the retailers who were supposed to receive the cement, indicated that “we (the retailers) hired the services of the loading boys. The driver left the depot alone, and we asked the guys to join him along the way to assist in the offloading process. They had already offloaded 200 bags and were distributing the remaining 600 bags when the sad incident occurred,” he indicated.
By uniquenewsgh.com