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Christmas Eve Bus Crash

  • Survivors of fatal Christmas crash grateful for recovery

      5 January 2017
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    By Victoria White - Hawkes Bay Today

    4:31 PM Wednesday Jan 4, 2017

    Two survivors of the fatal Christmas Eve crash, Scott Taufa'ao (left) and Tevita Lokotui (middle) have thanked the Hawke's Bay Hospital staff for their recovery.

    Two survivors of the fatal Christmas Eve crash, Scott Taufa'ao (left) and Tevita Lokotui (middle) have thanked the Hawke's Bay Hospital staff for their recovery. PHOTO/PAUL TAYLOR

    Survivors of a fatal Christmas Eve crash have thanked the Hawke's Bay Hospital staff who have helped them recover.

    ?On Christmas Eve, a bus carrying 54 people crashed down a 100m bank off State Highway 2 in Gisborne. Three of the passengers, Sione Taumalolo, 11, Talita Moimoi, 33, and Leotisia Malakai, 55, have since died.

    Many on board were teenage members of the touring band from Mailefihi Siu'ilikutapu College in Tonga, along with their teachers and supporters, and were on their way to Gisborne for a Christmas Day performance.

    Two of the eight people hospitalised after the crash, Scott Taufa'ao, in his 30s, Tevita Lokotui, 18, have been at Hawke's Bay Hospital.

    In an emotional ceremony today, the men and their families presented gifts to the Hospital staff who have helped the two recover.

    Mr Taufa'ao, a primary school teacher, said he remembered everything about the crash.

    "I was thrown out when the bus first crashed ..and I laid down still until the ambulance came," he said.

    While he waited, he "just looked at the sky, and thanked God...I was alive."

    He relayed how Tevita had remained in the bus when it crashed.

    Tevita was the head boy of the Vava'u school, and played the B Bass. The rugby player lost his left leg as a result of the crash, but today he was "feeling happy".

    "He knew that his leg was damaged, so he [fainted]," Mr Taufa'ao said. The next the 18-year-old had remembered was waking up in hospital.

    While it had been difficult for Tevita's parents, 'Aisea and Polosepina, to fly to New Zealand due to the immigration office being closed over Christmas, they were recently able to reunited with their son.

    The men's Tongan support people, Sia Uili from Waitakere Hospital and Akesa Uili Halatanu, the matron at Viola Hospital in Tonga, had worked with the hospital to get visa's for Tevita's parents to come out to New Zealand.

    "Because that's their wish to come, and I believed they should be here to support him," Ms Uili Halatanu said.

    "There was no feeling like having his parents with him.

    "When he saw his parents, there's nothing we could do to replace that."

    Tears were shed today, as the men and their families presented gifts from Tonga to the Hospital staff who have helped the two recover.

    The men and their families shared their thanks to the staff, and spoke of the high quality care and support they had received at the hospital.

    It is expected that Mr Taufa'ao will be discharged from hospital soon. Tevita will be flying to Auckland for further care, and is expected to be able to return home in around six weeks.

    He hopes to one day get a prosthetic leg.

    A resident who was one of the first on the scene has set up a Give A Little page for the crash survivors. More than $42,000 has been donated.

    ¦If you would like to donate money to the 46 Tongans who were injured in the crash, visit givealittle.co.nz/cause/christmasevebuscrash

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  • Homeward Bound

      29 December 2016
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    (The Gisborne Hearld, Dec 29)

    MORE than 20 members of the touring Tongan brass band involved in Saturday’s fatal crash who are able to travel flew out of Gisborne this morning on two Air New Zealand flights to Auckland.

    The remaining members able to travel will fly out this afternoon.

    “They are heartbroken but happy to be heading home,” said Unaloto Masila from the local Tongan community, who was at the airport to see them off.

    “There have been tears since Christmas Eve and there were more at the airport,” she said. The group will stay in Auckland until they fly back to Tonga on January 10.

    “It will give those people still in hospital a chance to fly home with them.”

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