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More tourists from Asia die on NZ roads

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Guess which race?



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No seatbelts on trio killed in Waikato crash

By Patrice Dougan @PatriceDougan

5:00 AM Wednesday Feb 18, 2015

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The surviving occupant was the only person in this car who was believed to have been wearing a seat belt. Picture /John van de Ven


Three people who died in a collision with a logging truck in south Waikato yesterday were not wearing seatbelts at the time, it is believed.

The crash was one of three fatal accidents in the North Island yesterday in which a total of six people died. Five of those deaths were on Waikato roads.

Three people died and one was critically injured when a car and a logging truck collided on State Highway 1 north of Tokoroa about 3.50pm. All four, foreign nationals believed to be from Asia, were in the car.

It is understood the male front seat passenger, who was airlifted to hospital, was the only person wearing a seatbelt at the time of the collision.

The car was believed to have spun out of control before smashing into the truck. Police said the car crossed the centre line but the cause was yet to be established. The female driver of the car and two rear-seat passengers, one male and one female, died at the scene. Police confirmed both in the rear were not wearing seatbelts.

The truck driver was shaken but not injured.

Police confirmed the car's passengers were foreign nationals but said no further details, including their nationality, would be released until next of kin had been notified.

SH1 was closed into the evening as emergency services worked to free the trapped bodies from the wreckage. Diversions were put in place at Wiltsdown Rd and Rollett Rd.

Less than two hours after the triple fatality, another person died in a crash on the SH1 Northern Motorway in Auckland, between Greville Rd and Oteha Valley Rd.

"A four-wheel-drive vehicle has left the motorway, crashed down a bank into a couple of lamp posts," a police spokesman said.
"The driver, despite CPR attempts, is deceased at the scene."

Earlier yesterday, two women died in a head-on collision near Thames, on SH25 at the intersection with Pipiroa Rd, between Waitakaruru and Kopu. A Thames-bound Mazda Demio and a Volkswagen Passat travelling north collided about 7.45am, with the two women in the Mazda dying from their injuries.

It was initially believed both women were Australian. However police later said it had been established one of the women was a New Zealander and the other Australian.

Work to formally identify the women and notify their families was under way, police said.

The sole woman occupant of the Passat was freed by firefighters and airlifted to hospital by helicopter in a serious to critical condition, Sergeant Dave Reid of the Waikato district command centre said.

The busy rural highway, which links Coromandel to Auckland, was closed until mid-afternoon while a lengthy extraction process was completed.

Three fatal accidents

• 7.45am Head-on collision near Thames, two dead
• 3.50pm Car and logging truck collide north of Tokoroa, three dead
• 5.38pm Crash on Northern motorway, one dead

By Patrice Dougan @PatriceDougan
- NZME.

Copyright ©2015, APN New Zealand Limited

 

xpo2015

Alfrescian
Loyal
See half of the car is already crushed. Even seatbeats can't save anyone from a crushed vehicle.
 

cocobobo

Alfrescian
Loyal
I enjoy going back to nz to chill at my vineyard. However, many times i almost always get driven off the road by gook drivers.

Asians should take nz road signs seriously, not like in Asia where 110kmh limit means you can still go 160kmh, 90 can still go 110kmh etc.

in nz when you approach a sharp corner and you see a big fuck-off sign that says 50kmh, it means if you take it at 55kmh you will most likely crash.
There is no allowance or kiasu factor in those speed limits.
 

ionzu

Alfrescian
Loyal
please be careful when driving in Australia and New Zealand. Strong cross winds will catch many drivers unaware, and the effects of the cross winds are greater at high speeds.

http://www.proven-driving-tips.com/windy_weather.html
"Crosswinds are winds that cross your direction of travel from either side. Again, if they are steady then you can adjust by steering slightly into that direction. Here, though, is where you need to be on the lookout for objects that will block or redirect the crosswind.

Many things can change the way the wind crosses your path. Trees, small hills, buildings and other vehicles on the road can make a strong crosswind act differently on your vehicle.

The crosswind can completely disappear. If you are not prepared you could steer yourself off the road or, worse, into an oncoming lane."
 

looneytan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
please be careful when driving in Australia and New Zealand. Strong cross winds will catch many drivers unaware, and the effects of the cross winds are greater at high speeds.
if those cuntries are under PAP, all roads will be built to follow wind direction
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Turns out they're Honkees not PRC....


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US family killed in truck crash were in NZ helping daughter settle into new home

By Sophie Ryan @SophieRyan
12:45 PM Thursday Feb 19, 2015
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The crash scene: The family had come to New Zealand to help their daughter settle into her new home before they returned to Hong Kong. Photo / John van de Ven


Police have named the three members of an American family who died in a collision with a logging truck near Tokoroa on Tuesday.

They were Warren Lee, 53, Aesoon Lee, 52 and Julie Lee, 20.

Mr and Mrs Lee were American citizens living in Hong Kong, police said.

Their daughter Julia had been living in Massachusetts, but was due to start university in Auckland. She was driving at the time of the crash.

Her 18-year-old brother was critically injured in the crash and remains in Waikato Hospital.

The family had come to New Zealand to help Julia settle into her new home before they returned to Hong Kong.
Police said investigations continued in to the cause of the crash.

The release of the victims' names comes as an advocate for truck drivers says the spate of fatal crashes involving trucks has caused deep concern.

Road Transport Forum chief executive Ken Shirley said the frequency of collisions involving trucks and other vehicles had caused concern within the road freight industry.

Four people died when they attempted a U-turn and pulled into the path of a logging truck on State Highway 1 at Uretiti, Northland in December.

"Now the last few weeks have been a real horror period," Mr Shirley said.

"On January 29 a Northland driver pulled out in front of a truck and trailer, apparently intending to go to a roadside market on the other side of the road with fatal consequences.

"Three people died when their car apparently spun out of control in front of a logging truck in Waikato [on Tuesday] and yesterday a Canterbury rental car driver crossed the centre line and hit a stock truck."

Mr Shirley said the roads were a truck driver's workplace.

"How many people have to go to work every day knowing that they could be the innocent participant in someone else's fatal mistake? The effect on the driver can be traumatic and long lasting."

He said being involved in a fatal crash could ruin a truck driver's life.

"They find themselves unable to drive a truck again. It's that shattering."

He said reports of fatal crashes that attributed blame to the truck driver were upsetting.

"It's a sad reality that in most fatal accidents involving a truck and another vehicle, the other vehicle is the primary cause of the crash."

By Sophie Ryan @SophieRyan
- NZME.

Copyright ©2015, APN New Zealand Limited

 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
female driver almost drowned in nz after driving bmw into water. cops broke rear windscreen with rock to save her.

image.jpg
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
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Tourist family crash claims fourth victim

5:20 PM Tuesday Feb 24, 2015

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The crash scene: The family had come to New Zealand to help their daughter settle into her new home before they returned to Hong Kong. Photo / John van de Ven


A fourth American has died after a fatal collision with a truck in Waikato last week.

Griffin Lee, 17, was taken to Waikato Hospital's intensive care unit in a critical condition after the crash north of Tokoroa on Tuesday.
Police said he died in hospital earlier today.

Warren Lee, 53, Aesoon Lee, 52, and their daughter Julia Lee, 20, died in the crash.

Mr and Mrs Lee were American citizens living in Hong Kong, while Ms Lee had been living and studying in Massachusetts. She was due to start studying at the University of Auckland a few days after the crash.

A hospital spokeswoman last week said Griffin Lee - a front-seat passenger - was not aware the crash had killed his family.

The family had come to New Zealand to help Ms Lee settle into her new home before they returned to Hong Kong. She was driving at the time of the crash.

The death come amid a spate of serious and fatal crashes involving foreign drivers, prompting calls for more to be done to reduce the number of crashes involving tourists.
- NZME.

Copyright ©2015, APN New Zealand Limited

 
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