Thursday, February 24, 2011

Seorang Lelaki Tewas Kerana Main Game Tanpa Henti


Seorang lelaki warga China menghembuskan nafas terakhirnya setelah bermain game tiga hari berturut-turut tanpa henti.

Dilpetik melalui Fox News, lelaki yang namanya tidak disebutkan itu tidak pernah tidur selama tiga hari berturut-turut, tidak makan dan tidak beranjak satu inchi pun dari komputernya.

Tiga hari kemudian ia ditemui koma di dalam kafe internet. Dirinya tidak bergerak namun masih bernafas, meskipun matanya telah tertutup rapat.

Lelaki yang selama satu bulan belakangan ini sering menghabiskan USD1.500 untuk bermain game itu langsung dikejarkan ke hospital terdekat. Sayangnya meskipun telah terburu-buru, pihak hospital tetap tidak boleh menyelamatkan nyawanya. Dia pun disah meninggal.

Setelah itu, pihak polis terus memindahkan beberapa komputer yang ada di kafe tersebut untuk penyelidikan. Dugaan sementara, sementara tersebut mati bunuh diri, namun pihak polis masih mencari sebab pasti kematiannya.

Peristiwa ini langsung mendapat sorotan umum dan kerajaan China di mana penduduknya memang terkenal memiliki kecanduan terhadap game dengan jumlah penderita sekitar 30 juta orang.


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Heboh harga minyak naik lagi? hah?


Kerajaan Kekalkan Harga RON95 Dan Diesel, Kata Ismail Sabri

Kerajaan mengekalkan harga semasa bagi RON 95 pada RM1.90 dan diesel pada RM1.80 meskipun harga minyak dunia semakin meningkat, kata Menteri Perdagangan Dalam Negeri, Koperasi dan Kepenggunaan Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob, pada Khamis.
Beliau berkata berikutan itu kerajaan sedang dalam perbincangan dengan Kementerian Kewangan untuk mencari alternatif bagi menampung peningkatan itu.

"Kerajaan akan mengekalkan harga semasa, dan melihat opsyen atau alternatif lain walaupun tanggungan kerajaan bertambah.
"Setakat ini boleh tahan, untuk tidak naikan harga RON 95 dan diesel," katanya kepada pemberita selepas mengumumkan keputusan kewangan 2010 Bank Rakyat di sini.

Beliau berkata peruntukan bajet untuk subsidi tahun ini sebanyak RM10.3 bilion dan jika trend itu berterusan, ia akan mencecah RM14 bilion.
Subsidi 10.3 bilion itu termasuk petroleum, RON 95, diesel, gas LPG, gula, beras dan minyak masak.

Disember lepas, harga RON 95 dan diesel masing-masing meningkat lima sen kepada RM1.90 dan RM1.80 seliter.
Antara altenatif yang sedang dikaji ialah menyemak semula kuota petrol dan diesel yang diterima oleh pihak-pihak tertentu, katanya kepada pemberita.

Ditanya bila kedua-dua kementerian akan memuktamadkan perbincangan itu, Ismail Sabri berkata ia akan dicapai secepat mungkin.
"Ia tidak akan mengambil masa yang panjang. Lebih lama diambil, lebih banyak subsidi akan ditanggung oleh kerajaan," katanya.

Beliau berkata harga barangan makanan juga meningkat, terutama produk import yang menyebabkan negara sebagai pengimport, perlu menanganinya.
Mengulas sama ada harga barangan subsidi lain akan meningkat memandangkan harga bahan api tidak dinaikkan, Ismail Sabri berkata "kita tidak bercadang untuk menaikkan subsidi barangan lain".

"Mulai 1 Februari, subsidi untuk semua pengilang makanan dan minuman manis yang menggunakan gula sebanyak 500 metrik ton sebulan, dihentikan.
"Kerajaan dapat menjimatkan sebanyak RM128 juta," katanya memberi contoh tindakan yang dilaksanakan oleh kerajaan untuk menjimatkan peruntukan subsidi.



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The Moment New Zealand quake shook a city to pieces

  • Death toll at 75 but hope is fading fast for 300 missing
  • Search called off at TV station and school showing 'no signs of life'
  • Race against time to free people trapped in the rubble
  • Briton and Irish citizen confirmed killed in the disaster
  • Deadliest New Zealand natural disaster for 80 years 
Hope is fading fast for hundreds of people who are still missing, feared dead in Christchurch as searches in the city are called off.
Families, friends and colleagues are being told to prepare for the worst as they are told the chances of finding their loved ones alive are extremely low.
A few experienced joy and relief as people were pulled from the wreckage with bleary eyes but barely a scratch on them, but those scenes are not expected to be repeated as time goes by.
At least 75 people have now known to have died but there are still around 300 people missing under deep piles of rubble and huge chunks of concrete.

Moment the earthquake hit: Extraordinary image of dust rising from Christchurch taken seconds after the 6.3 magnitude earthquake struck three miles below the city
Moment the earthquake hit: Extraordinary image of dust rising from Christchurch taken seconds after the 6.3 magnitude earthquake struck three miles below the city

Rescuers called off a search at Canterbury TV station and a language school where about 25 people are missing, feared dead.
Elsewhere, rescue workers were inching their way through the ruins of a chapel in central Christchurch early today after 'signs of human life' were located.
The identity of the person believed trapped in the rubble was not immediately revealed but officials said they were hoping they would have a successful rescue as the day proceeded.
The signs that someone was alive came from the wreckage of the Holy Cross Chapel, close to the ruined city cathedral.

Even as rescue crews began working on the chapel's wreckage another aftershock - the 19th in 12 hours - occurred, causing work to stop temporarily.
Work at several sites during the night failed to find any survivors.

The city's tallest hotel suffered severe structural damage in the quake and a surrounding area has been cleared over fears that it could topple at any moment.
Marking the desperation now felt in New Zealand, John Hamilton, the director of the country's Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency Management, said people only had a window of a couple of days to be given a reasonable prospect of survival.
Some seriously injured victims trapped deep in rubble of some of the city's most iconic buildings had to have limbs amputated before they could be freed.

Rescue workers at the Canterbury TV building
Razed to the ground: The Canterbury TV building today, where police now say there is no hope


Canterbury TV building site
Rubble: An aerial of the site where the Canterbury TV building has collapsed

Kent Manning and sister Lizzy, with their father, after being told there is no hope for their mother
Kent Manning and sister Lizzy, with their father, after being told there is no hope for their mother

The Canterbury television building, reduced to a pile of debris and twisted metal, was initially the focus for relief efforts amid estimates 100 people were trapped inside.
Teenagers Lizzy and Kent Manning were among those waiting on the sodden grass outside, desperate for news of their mother. 


Donna Manning
No hope: Donna Manning was killed inside the Canterbury TV building

Despite the utter devastation before them and warnings that chances of survival of those trapped were slim, the pair were determined to stay hopeful.
With tears pouring down her face, Lizzy, 18, insisted: 'My mum is superwoman, she'd do anything' but at that very moment, a police official came over and started: 'I have some horrible news...'
The pair were told their mother Donna, a TV presenter, could not have survived and that everyone trapped was now believed to be dead.

The Manning siblings, their heartbreak etched on their faces, bowed their heads and wept as their father Jonathan rushed over to wrap them in his arms.
The family became the face of the tragedy in New Zealand today as, across the country, relatives were struggling to absorb the same, devastating news.

Between 80 and more than 100 are believed to be stuck in the single building after the catastrophic earthquake ripped through the picture postcard city on Monday.
Rescuers were forced to call off attempts to save them because the structure was so badly damaged. Police say they are '100 per cent certain' no one left inside could have survived.
Police operations commander, Inspector Dave Lawry, said: 'We don't believe this site is now survivable' and warned the building's tower is now also in danger of collapse.

'At a certain point, I'm not going to risk my staff [searching] for people who I believe have no chance of survivability. That's the end of it.'
He added: 'My heart goes out to those families... knowing that some of their children have probably been killed in this incident. We will do the very best for your people that we can.'

Ann Bodkin
Team effort: Rescue workers carry out Ann Bodkin from the Pyne Gould Guinness building

two men celebrating being freed
Relief: Two men celebrating this morning after being pulled from a destroyed building

It is not known exactly how many people were inside the building, but they included up to 10 Japanese students at a language school and 15 staff from a TV station. 
Canterbury TV chairman Nick Smith said 15 of his employees who worked inside were missing.
'We're working on the assumption that everyone we haven't managed to contact was in the building, and that would number probably 15,' he said. 

He said staff who managed to get out described a scene that was 'like out of a horror movie' and broke down when recounting their ordeal.
'[They've] lost a lot of friends, a lot of colleagues, a lot of talent and a lot of lifelong relationships,' Mr Smith said.
Officials say the death toll stands at 75 but emergency workers believe it could climb as high as 300 once the rubble is cleared.

It has now been confirmed a Briton and an Irish citizen are among the victims.
The Briton, who has yet to be named, had lived in Northern Ireland and had an Irish wife. The Irishman has been named as Eoin McKenna, originally from Monaghan.
Some 120 people were rescued overnight but hundreds remain unaccounted for as exhausted rescue workers, using thermal cameras, continued to hunt for signs of life.
There are fears weakened buildings that are so far still standing - including the 27-floor Hotel Grand Chancellor - are also on the brink of collapse. 

Police Superintendent Russell Gibson, speaking on Radio New Zealand, said there were scenes of 'absolute carnage' in the city centre.
'There are bodies littering the streets. They're trapped in cars, crushed under rubble and where they are clearly deceased our focus unfortunately at this time has turned to the living.'

Amid the tragedy of death and serious injury, there were remarkable stories of people being pulled from the rubble without a scratch more than 24 hours after the quake.
Ann Bodkin, who had been stuck in the twisted metal and concrete remains of the Pyne Gould Guinness building, was brought out and reunited with her husband this morning.
As she was carried to safety, grey drizzle gave way to sunshine. Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said: 'They got Ann out of the building and God turned on the lights.'

However, Mr Parker warned people to prepare for further heartbreak as hopes of more rescues dwindled. 'We need to harden ourselves for what we are going to hear,' he said.
'We are getting people out alive so keep your hopes up, but it is going to be a hard day. I think as the news begins to unfold today we will have a clearer picture and it is not going to be a happy picture.' 


Rescue workers search rubble near the Canterbury TV building
In ruins: Rescue workers search rubble near the Canterbury TV building

Rescue workers outside the collapsed CTV building
Reminiscent of 9/11: Rescue workers outside the collapsed CTV building 

A huge rock fell on buildings in Sumner
Crushed: A huge rock fell on buildings in Sumner 

A rescue worker looks for signs of life in the rubble of the CTV building
A damaged road into Sumner
A rescue worker looking for signs of life in the rubble of the CTV building and a cracked road

One construction manager described using sledgehammers and chainsaws to cut into the Pyne Gould building from the roof, hacking down through layers of sandwiched offices.
The team found horrific scenes of bodies crushed under concrete slabs. One seriously injured man who was trapped died as he was talking to rescuers, Fred Haering said.

Another victim's leg was pinned by concrete. To save him from certain death, he was given drugs to deaden the pain and his leg amputated with the hacksaw.
Mr Haering said: 'It's a necessity of the game. How are you gonna get out?'
Blood-covered survivors stumbled in a daze through the rubble-strewn streets.
There were reports that a baby was lifted from its dead mother's arms after the woman was struck by rubble from a collapsed building.

Mall worker Tom Brittenden said: 'There was a lady outside we tried to free with a child. A big bit of concrete or brick had fallen on her and she was holding her child. She was gone.'
The trapped continuously called for help - many with extraordinary calm. Australian Anne Voss was stuck in the Pyne Gould office block yesterday.

Speaking on her mobile phone, she told how she was 'sort of squashed' under her desk with an injured hand and said she thought another 30 were also trapped inside.

'I can't see,' she said. 'I can hear the others calling out for help but I don't have contact with them because I can't move.
'I rang my kids to say goodbye. It was absolutely horrible. My daughter was crying and I was crying because I honestly thought that was it. You know, you want to tell them you love them don't you?'
She added: 'I'm not going to give up. I'm going to stay awake but it's dark and horrible in here.'

Fears had been growing for her safety after her phone battery died but miraculously, she too was apparently rescued today.
Her first words to her son after emerging into the daylight were: 'I'm sure someone's watching over me', according to the Herald Sun.
Her son Robert only found out his mother was alive when he arrived in Christchurch from Melbourne and believes the desk saved her life. 

'It would definitely be over. We are just overjoyed and amazed, as well as concerned for the other people as well. She seems as happy as she could be,' he said.
Christchurch, said to be more English than England, has a population of 340,000 and is New Zealand's 
second largest city after Auckland.
Known as the Garden City, it welcomes many thousands of Britons every year, many of them visiting relatives who have emigrated there.
The quake, measuring 6.3 on the Richter Scale, brought the spire of the South Island city's stone cathedral crashing to the ground. 


Canadian Carole Young wept as she told how she and her husband Ross had a narrow escape from death as debris rained down around them while they were on a tour of the cathedral.
'The way it was all coming down as we fled...it reminded me of 9/11,' said Mrs Young. 'It was all tumbling down around us. We know that people died in there so someone was looking after us.'

Rescue workers help a woman from a ruined building
Pulled from the rubble: Rescue workers help a woman from a ruined building today 


Murray and Kelly James look at their ruined house
Destroyed: Murray and Kelly James look at their ruined house in central Christchurch


TV building
Sobering: As night fell on Wednesday, the TV building was little more than a mound of rubble

Office blocks collapsed, roads buckled and cars were crushed. It also caused 30million tons of ice to break from New Zealand's biggest glacier, the Tasman, causing a tsunami with waves of up to 12ft.
The tremor - an aftershock from a quake last year - struck at 12.51pm, right in the middle of a busy lunchtime, at a depth of only three miles - its shallow nature provoking greater devastation.
The epicentre was under the harbour at Lyttelton, seven miles from Christchurch, as office workers were enjoying their lunch break in the city square which is dominated by the cathedral.
Briton Barnaby Luck said: 'Everything started shaking and it became more and more violent - it was like someone had got hold of the building and was shaking it and swinging it back and forwards.
Another UK citizen, Alec Allen, was playing tennis when the quake struck. 'There was a deep rumble like thunder then everything was shaking and people were screaming,' he said.
'I looked at the court and all of this mud just seeped up through the ground. The court started breaking up and flooding with water and mud coming through the earth.'

A firefighter checks rubble near the collapsed CTV building
Devastation: A firefighter checks rubble near the collapsed CTV building


Survivors and people left homeless in a disaster shelter
Cramped: Survivors and people left homeless in a disaster shelter 


buckled rail line
Sheer force: A buckled rail line after the 6.3 magnitude earthquake ripped through Christchurch 


Timeball Station
The side of the Timeball Station was destroyed by the quake


Many buildings collapsed because they had been weakened by a massive 7.1 scale tremor last September, which caused less devastation because it was at a much greater depth.

New Zealand's Prime Minister John Key said: 'We may be witnessing New Zealand's darkest day. People are just sitting on the side of the road, their heads in their hands.
'This is a community that is absolutely in agony. There are no words that can spare our pain. We are witnessing a violent and ruthless act of nature.'
Police have warned that anyone entering a cordon they have set up around the city centre without authority will be arrested after several arrests overnight for looting.

Hundreds spent last night huddled in emergency centres amid warnings of more aftershocks which could bring down more buildings. Power lines were down, leaving homes in darkness.
Householders were told not to take showers or flush lavatories because the city's water supply, sewage works and gas lines had been destroyed.
Experts predict insurance losses could reach $12billion, making the earthquake costliest natural disaster since Hurricane Ike in 2008.

rescue graphic 
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Berita baik buat kakitangan awam dan swasta...yihaa...


Golongan pekerja sektor awam dan swasta dijangka menikmati gaji minimum baru pada tahun ini apabila Akta Gaji Minimum mendapat kelulusan Kabinet.

Bagaimanapun, Timbalan Menteri Sumber Manusia, Datuk Maznah Mazlan berkata, amaun bagi tangga gaji minimum itu belum diputuskan kerana masih dalam perbincangan.

Pihaknya memerlukan kajian dan analisis terperinci daripada pakar sebelum mengisytiharkan amaun tersebut selain penerimaan semua pihak yang berkepentingan iaitu pekerja dan majikan.

“Kerajaan akan sentiasa berunding dengan pekerja dan majikan dalam usaha menyeimbangkan kepentingan dan memberi keputusan menang-menang kepada kedua-dua belah pihak.
“Kita tidak boleh membuat keputusan secara rambang kerana ia melibatkan semua sektor.

“Jadi kita perlu teliti dan merujuk kepada pakar-pakar yang bukan sahaja membuat kajian dan analisis tetapi membantu membuat cadangan kepada kerajaan,” katanya.
Beliau berkata demikian selepas menyampaikan ucaptama pada program forum umum Penggajian: Pengambilan, Kontrak dan Kesesuaian - Cabaran Masa Kini, Isu dan Kesulitan, di sini hari ini.

Forum anjuran Persatuan Perunding Sumber Manusia Malaysia (MAHRC) dengan kerjasama Institut Pengurusan Malaysia (MIM) itu dihadiri seramai 150 pengamal dalam bidang sumber manusia.
Maznah berkata, penggubalan akta baru itu amat penting dalam mencari penyelesaian berhubung gaji pokok 37 peratus pekerja tempatan yang ketika ini berada di bawah paras kemiskinan.

Menurutnya, kementerian juga akan mengemukakan cadangan kepada Kabinet untuk melantik ahli Majlis Konsultasi Gaji Kebangsaan dalam membantu kerajaan menentukan pendekatan terbaik untuk gaji minimum baru.



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Hanya kerana beras, hilang rasa kemanusiaan?


Pemandu treler membawa muatan beras yang terlibat dalam kemalangan dengan sebuah lori pasir semalam, melalui detik cemas apabila dia terpaksa menahan kesakitan dan dibiarkan terbaring di tengah jalan hampir satu jam tanpa dibantu oleh mana-mana pihak.
Lebih malang lagi apabila kecederaan yang dialami Ahmad Rodzlin Ahmad Murad, 27, tidak diendahkan bahkan dia dituduh memandu laju dalam keadaan mengantuk.

Namun, apa yang lebih dikesalkan mangsa apabila orang ramai yang berhenti untuk melihat kemalangan itu tidak menghulurkan bantuan sebaliknya sibuk mengaut beras yang bertaburan di atas lebuh raya.
“Hampir satu jam saya terbaring di atas lebuh raya dan tiada seorang pun yang menghulurkan bantuan. Malah, mereka kelam kabut mengutip beras yang bertaburan.

“Tidak cukup dengan beras, beg dan telefon bimbit saya juga diambil. Bayangkan dalam keadaan berlumuran darah, mereka hanya memandang tanpa membantu memberikan kain untuk menutup luka saya,” katanya ketika ditemui di Hospital Raja Permaisuri Bainun di sini hari ini.

Kejadian pukul 10 pagi di Kilometer 394.4, Lebuh Raya Utara-Selatan berdekatan Tanjung Malim itu turut meragut nyawa kelindan treler berkenaan, Hanafi Mohd. Daud, 22.
Katanya, akibat kejadian itu dia mengalami kecederaan di bahagian paha dan lengan kiri dan pihak hospital terpaksa menampal kecederaan tersebut dengan kulit di bahagian paha.

Ahmad Rodzlin memberitahu, kejadian itu berlaku apabila dia cuba mengelak daripada terlanggar lori pasir yang tiba-tiba memotong dan memperlahankan kenderaan di bahu jalan tanpa memberikan isyarat lampu.
Katanya, lori tersebut mungkin cuba mengelak daripada melalui sekatan jalan raya oleh Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan (JPJ) tidak jauh dari tempat kejadian.

“Jika lihat daripada gambar dalam akhbar, lori saya memang berada di lorong yang betul, manakala sebahagian badan lori pasir masih berada di atas jalan raya dan bahu jalan.
“Saya tidak sempat mengelak sebab secara tiba-tiba pemandu itu memperlahankan kenderaan dan saya percaya ini ada mengena dengan sekatan jalan raya yang diadakan JPJ,” katanya.

Ahmad Rodzlin yang berpengalaman selama lima tahun membawa lori berkata, kemalangan itu merupakan kali pertama dialaminya dan ketika itu, dia dalam perjalanan ke Puchong, Selangor untuk menghantar ratusan guni beras dari sebuah kilang di Perlis.

Tambahnya, dia kini bimbang dengan penerimaan keluarga Hanafi yang meninggal dunia di Hospital Slim River kerana mengalami kecederaan parah di kepala.



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Kemalangan Ngeri


Kelmarin mungkin merupakan hari yang paling memilukan buat seorang lelaki apabila dia menyaksikan ibu dan bapa mentuanya menemui ajal dalam keadaan ngeri selepas motosikal yang ditunggang pasangan itu dirempuh sebuah kereta.

Kejadian pukul 9.15 malam di Jalan Kuala Sanglang, Kampung Tok Mengkula di sini itu mengakibatkan Omar Ismail, 59, tercampak ke kanan jalan manakala isterinya, Aishah Teh, 65, melekat pada cermin hadapan kereta. Wanita itu kemudian diseret sejauh kira-kira 30 meter.
Pasangan itu mati di tempat kejadian.

Difahamkan, sebelum itu, pasangan tersebut baru sahaja pulang dari surau yang terletak kira-kira 60 meter dari rumah mereka selepas menunaikan solat Isyak dengan menunggang motosikal jenis Honda EX5 Class.



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Kejutan terima jambangan bunga


JAGUH berbasikal trek negara, Mohd Azizulhasni Awang yang kini berada di Melbourne menjalani proses pemulihan akibat kecederaan ketika kejohanan di Manchester, baru-baru ini mendapat kejutan apabila menerima kiriman jambangan bunga dan buah-buahan daripada Timbalan Perdana Menteri.

Kiriman daripada Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin itu diterima sebaik tiba di rumahnya, semalam dari Manchester selepas selamat menjalani pembedahan mengeluarkan serpihan kayu yang tertusuk di betis kirinya akibat kemalangan ketika menyertai kejohanan Trek Berbasikal Siri Piala Dunia.

“Saya baru tiba di rumah (Melbourne) dari Manchester. Kemudian ada orang hantar kiriman jambangan bunga dan buah-buahan. Bila saya baca kad yang disertakan, saya amat terkejut bila mendapati pengirimnya ialah Tan Sri Muhyiddin.

“Saya rasa berbangga dan terharu dengan keprihatinan Timbalan Perdana Menteri,” katanya dalam khidmat pesanan ringkas, semalam.

Sementara itu, Muhyiddin dalam kad kirimannya berkata: “Saya mendoakan Mohd Azizulhasni segera sembuh. Saya hargai semangat saudara yang tidak pernah mengenal erti mengalah bagi mengharumkan nama Malaysia di peringkat antarabangsa,”




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Lagi angkara babi?


“Dalam keadaan samar-samar, saya nampak objek tercampak ke tengah lebuh raya lalu menekan brek sebelum mengelak ke kiri jalan,” kata pemandu treler yang terbabit kemalangan di Kilometer 209, Lebuhraya Utara-Selatan (Plus) arah utara, di sini, malam kelmarin.
Pemandu itu, Ah Pang, 53, berkata dia mengelak daripada melanggar mangsa dan dua kenderaan yang melintangi jalan, namun treler dipandunya dilanggar sebuah Toyota Camry dari belakang.

“Ketika berada kira-kira 50 meter dari lokasi, saya nampak dua kereta terbabit kemalangan dan pada masa sama melihat ada orang tercampak dari kenderaan.
“Saya menekan brek dan berjaya mengelak daripada melanggar mangsa, tetapi apabila melihat melalui cermin sisi, ada sebuah kereta di belakang turut berpusing dan terbabas selepas melanggar bahagian belakang sebelah kiri treler saya,” katanya yang ditemui di tempat kejadian di sini, semalam.

Kejadian kira-kira jam 9 malam berhampiran Restoran Jejantas Ayer Keroh itu dipercayai berlaku selepas pemandu Proton Wira Aeroback dikenali sebagai Zulfakar Hamsun, 26, melanggar seekor babi hutan yang tiba-tiba melintas jalan.

Berikutan rempuhan itu, kenderaan berkenaan gagal dikawal dan berpusing beberapa kali sebelum tersadai di tepi lebuh raya. Pada masa sama, sebuah Toyota Altis melanggar bahagian depan kereta dipandu Zulfakar menyebabkan enjin Proton Wira Aeroback itu tercampak ke kiri jalan.

Zulfakar dan pemandu Toyota Altis iaitu seorang warga Myanmar berusia 20-an yang parah dikejarkan ke hospital untuk rawatan. Dua lagi mangsa menaiki Toyota Camry cedera ringan.

Sementara itu, seorang lagi mangsa, Tan Chia Hau, 27, berkata, pada mulanya dia menyangka kerja baik pulih jalan sedang dilakukan kerana dua kereta melintang tengah lebuh raya, namun tiada lampu amaran dipasang sebelum menyedari ia kemalangan.

“Ketika kira-kira 20 meter dari tempat kejadian, saya yang duduk di sebelah penumpang Toyota Camry dipandu rakan, Lee Chi Hong, 24, menyedari berlaku kemalangan,” katanya.



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