Fresh Zealand Car Crash Victims Were Married Duo From Electronics Hard – Gone Too Soon: Part Five

Fresh Zealand Car Crash Victims Were Married Duo From Electronics Rock-hard – Gone Too Soon: Part five

Many Singaporeans go overseas for holiday and work, and they often drive. But sometimes we may leave behind that the roads and traffic conditions in foreign grounds are different from that in our petite city of Singapore. The distances are longer, roads are more winding and drivers may drive more leisurely.

And all it takes is one mistake for tragedy to strike.

Singaporeans Rena Ong and Chen Zhihao found this out too late to prevent themselves from becoming the latest Singaporean casualties of car crashes overseas.

Duo And Colleagues

Both Ms Ong and Mr Chen, a married duo, were employees of United States-based technology rock hard Crestron.

Ms Ong was listed on her LinkedIn profile as an operations executive, and Mr Chen was a technical director.

Ms Ong had celebrated her 29th bday last month (April), and Mr Chen was 39, according to The Straits Times.

The Straits Times also quoted Crestron Asia-Pacific CEO Stuart Craig as telling that the company was “devastated” at their deaths.

“They made a wonderful contribution to our company and were well-loved and respected across the audiovisual industry,” he said.

One of Ms Ong’s secondary school classmates, who gave her name as Ms Nicole, said Ms Ong was a friendly, loving friend.

Another colleague of the duo was quoted by The Straits Times as telling: “When we heard the news we just hoped they were kidding.”

And a former classmate of Ms Ong’s told The Straits Times that she was “an easy-going friend, always there to help when she could”.

Tribute

Fellow audio-visual company ESCO posted a moving tribute to Ms Ong and Mr Chen on its Facebook page.

The tribute sent condolences to Crestron for the loss.

Friends and colleagues collective their trouble over Facebook too.

How Did It Happen?

The duo were in Fresh Zealand on vacation, The Straits Times reported.

According to Fresh Zealand news site Stuff.co.nz, they had just arrived in the country and rented a campervan from Jucy.

They were then driving on State Highway 1, south of Dunsandel, when their vehicle veered onto the wrong side of the road.

It then hit an oncoming ute vehicle head-on. The duo died at the scene.

Jucy CEO Tim Alpe was quotged by Stuff as telling: “Our thoughts are with all the people involved, it’s a tragic situation.”

Police Warning

Senior Sergeant Pete Stills was quoted by Stuff as telling that the campervan “rounded the arch on Main South Rd and then for some unknown reason has crossed the centre line and is entirely on the wrong side of the road when it struck the northbound vehicle”.

The policeman also warned: “If you’ve recently arrived in the country, perhaps sleep is the priority before driving, if that’s the case – and I’m not pre-empting anything – and being familiar with our road rules.”

A third person involved in the accident was hospitalised with non-life-threatening injuries.

Fresh Zealand tech company also warned about self-drive tourists about driving in Fresh Zealand in a Facebook post:

Previous Incidents

We think the warnings are timely given the upcoming June school holidays.

Singaporeans used to driving on our puny island may not be aware of the dangers of driving overseas, and this has been reflected in this incident, as well as several previous incidents of deadly crashes overseas involving Singaporeans.

On Nov 29, 2015, Lew Wei Kiong, 29, was involved in a 4-car pile-up in Fresh Zealand. Lew, driving a rented Toyota, was driving on a highway when he allegedly crossed over to the other side of the roado to overtake. He crashed into two cars and a motorbike that were going in the opposite direction. The motorcyclist, 39-year-old Craig Alan Chambers, died.

In 2014, Singapore Airlines very first officer Benjamin Wu Yonghao, 32, was behind the wheel when his rented Toyota car ran a stop sign at a junction just outside Christchurch, hitting a four-wheel-drive towing a pony trailer. Four colleagues were in the car with him. Two escaped unhurt, but chief steward Chew Weng Wai suffered brain injuries and stewardess Vanessa Coehlo had fractured bones and injuries to her spleen and bladder. Wu was ordered to pay them S$9,997 each in compensation.

In 2013, a 10-year-old Singaporean doll and her mother were injured when a Toyota she and her family was in hit a tree and flipped over near Lake Tikitapu in Rotorua on the North Island.

In 2012, Singapore Armed Compels Lieutenant Mohamed Najibullah Suhaimi, 26, and his wifey Raihana Mohamad Rashid, 25, were on their honeymoon when they were both killed after their car collided with a camper van in Mangatawhiri, south of Auckland.

It’s indeed sad when the lives of two youthful people are cut brief just like that due to a preventable car accident.

So Singaporeans travelling overseas, do take note that driving in a different country is hazardous, and drive more securely than you would in Singapore.

We send our deepest condolences to the family and friends of Ms Ong and Mr Chen.

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