Goa Road Accident: Four Labourers Killed, Five Injured As Private Bus Rams Into Roadside Shanties in South Goa
Four labourers were killed and five others critically injured when a private bus rammed into two roadside shanties at an industrial estate in South Goa district, police said on Sunday.
Panaji, May 26: Four labourers were killed and five others critically injured when a private bus rammed into two roadside shanties at an industrial estate in South Goa district, police said on Sunday. The accident took place at around 11.30 pm on Saturday at the Verna Industrial Estate when the labourers, engaged in road construction work, were sleeping in the shanties, they said.
The bus driver has been arrested, the police said. A labourer claimed the bus driver was under the influence of alcohol at the time and threatened the other labourers to kill them if they complained to anyone about the incident. The bus carrying staff of a private company hit two shanties where labourers were sleeping, a police official said. "Four labourers died on the spot while five were critically injured and admitted to the Goa Medical College and Hospital," he said. UP Road Accident: 11 People Dead, 10 Injured After Truck Turns Turtle on Bus Carrying Devotees to Uttarakhand in Shahjahanpur (Watch Videos)
The labourers were employed by a contractor, the police said. One of the labourers told reporters that the bus rammed into their shanties. "After the incident, the bus driver threatened to kill us if we complained to anyone. The driver was under the influence of alcohol," claimed Rupender Kumar Mathur, whose uncle Ramesh Mathur and brother Anil Mathur were among those killed in the incident. Goa CM Pramod Sawant Spots Accident, Helps Victim in Ghogol Margao Region; Video Surfaces
He also claimed that medical help reached the spot late due to which there was a delay in taking the victims to the District Hospital in Margao. Rupender Mathur said he was also staying in one of the accident-hit shanties but was saved as he had come out to attend a mobile phone call. "Three more persons who were out (of the shanties) on mobile phone calls were saved," he said.
(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)