Otago Daily Times

Waikouaiti woman named as fatality

- HAMISH MACLEAN and DAISY HUDSON hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

THE woman who died in a car crash after a tree fell across State Highway 1 north of Dunedin this week was known to all in the small community she lived in.

Waikouaiti Coast Community Board member Sonya Billyard said yesterday the death of Den Thi Baird (51) would hit the community hard.

Mrs Baird, who escaped Cambodia for New Zealand in 1994, introduced the community to Asian food while she ran the Waikouaiti Fish Inn with her husband, Alister Baird, for years before stepping away last year, Ms Billyard said.

Both Mrs Baird and her husband were visible members of a closeknit community that would rally around the grieving family.

‘‘Everyone knows who they are,’’ Ms Billyard said.

‘‘I still can’t believe it.

‘‘I still can’t get my head around it, to be honest.’’

A 2009 Newshub report told the story of how Mrs Baird’s

Cambodian family was ripped apart by the infamous Khmer Rouge regime.

At the time, she had an emotional video call reunion with her brother 18,000km away in France; she had not seen him since 1975 when he fled their homeland with the French army.

Their father was taken away by soldiers when she was 7 years old, Newshub reported.

Police named Mrs Baird in a statement yesterday afternoon.

Emergency services were called to the crash that killed Mrs Baird, south of Waikouaiti, at 12.10pm on Thursday.

An Otago Daily Times photograph­er at the scene said a tree had come down at the bottom of the Kilmog, and there was a southbound car upside down in a ditch.

A St John spokesman confirmed two people were taken to Dunedin Hospital with moderate injuries, and police later confirmed a third person, now known to be Mrs Baird, had died.

Stuff reported Mrs Baird was a passenger in a car whose driver swerved to avoid the tree.

The car then left the road and flipped on to its roof, Stuff said.

An NZ Transport Agency spokeswoma­n said it undertook tree felling, under traffic management, earlier this week at a separate site about 100m away from where the crash happened.

The collapse of the tree at the crash site was unrelated to the tree removal work undertaken earlier in the week, the spokeswoma­n said.

There were no obvious environmen­tal factors such as strong winds in the area at the time of the crash that caused the tree to fall.

But this and other details would be covered in the police investigat­ion.

The agency’s Coastal Otago highway maintenanc­e team, which managed nearly 800km of highway and road reserve, had a continuous programme to identify hazardous trees and undertake their removal throughout the region, she said.

All the poplars in the grouping of wilding trees near the highway where the tree fell yesterday would be removed in the next two weeks.

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