Home page
Site Map
Search Advanced Search
Today's most viewed
EDITOR'S CHOICE
NEWS
French students murder suspect was treated for burns
Firefighters battle Thornton Heath factory blaze
AFC WIMBLEDON
CRYSTAL PALACE NEWS
Warnock expects Flahavan to push Speroni
COMPETITIONS
UGLIEST PET COMPETITION
Tickets to the Haribo Summer Sports camp and other sports goodies.
ON THIS DAY
BIZARRE LONDON
Do you have clutter stranger than a pickled monkey?
'UFOs' spotted in Cheam
VOTE
Did you enjoy Saturday night's Doctor Who finale?
Yes, it was full of twists and turns
No, it wasn't as good as I was expecting
I don't watch Doctor Who
GET OUR NEWS BY E-MAIL
Most read Comments
Bus crash 'like a bomb', court hears
Ismail Ahmed
Ismail Ahmed

A woman who saw her mum die and her two-year-old daughter lose her lower right leg in a bus crash likened the moment to being hit by a bomb, a court has heard.

A 65-year-old grandmother, 35-year-old mum and young daughter were involved in the family tragedy in North Worple Way, Mortlake, on April 25 last year.

None can be named for legal reasons.

Driver of the 209 bus, Ismail Ahmed, of Southall, denies causing death by dangerous driving and two counts of grievous bodily harm.

His trial began at Kingston Crown Court yesterday.

The mum told the jury she was on the pavement and had bent down to pick something up when she saw the bus coming towards her.

She said: "I don't know where it came from.

"It was like a bomb had hit.

"I was behind the barrier and I was squashed against the barrier with my left leg up and my right leg under the bus."

The mum said she saw her mother fall and continued: "I said mummy don't die'.

"Are you all right? Are you all right?'"

The court heard how the mum saw that her toddler's right leg was "like a purple balloon with her foot hanging off it".

Doctors battled to save the youngster's leg but had to amputate it below the knee.

The mum has a permanent scar on her lower left leg.

She also has bruising on her left buttock and scarring.

She added: "I think to mount the kerb and hit us with such a ferocious manner, I have always anticipated for the bus to be moving from stationary to 60mph."

Wayne Cleaver, prosecuting, said: "This was not a tragic but unavoidable accident, but rather a collision caused by the dangerous manner of the defendant's driving."

Mr Cleaver said the 290 was blocking the road as it waited to gain entry into the busy bus depot and he told jurors they would hear witness accounts describing shouting, car horns sounding and Ahmed waving his arms and shouting at other drivers in the depot.

The trial continues.

7:11pm Tuesday 13th May 2008

Print   Email this
Archive
'
This panel uses JavaScript
Click here to read your local newspaper online
Click here to read about the Green Guardian Awards 2008
Croydon Champions
Click here for more information
CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST NEWS ON GREEN GUARDIAN
Find out what's on
Get the latest events using our database
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy © Copyright 2001-2008
Newsquest Media Group
A Gannett Company
This site is part of Newsquest's audited local newspaper network