The Press

Fatal journey from funeral

- Blair Ensor, Sam Sherwood and Jennifer Eder

A van load of people were on their way home after attending a funeral when seven of them were killed in a crash – one of the country’s deadliest.

The van was en route to the Cook Strait ferry when it crossed the centreline and collided with a refrigerat­ed goods truck on State Highway 1 between Blenheim and Picton about 7.30am yesterday.

The names of the victims are yet to be released. It is believed they have relatives living overseas.

There were two loud bangs as the vehicles smashed into one another, a resident reported. Passers-by rushed to help the injured.

Seven of the nine people in the mangled wreck of the van died, including a baby and the driver. The survivors were flown to Wellington Hospital with serious injuries.

There were several teenagers in the vehicle. It was unclear how many of them were among the dead. Most of the

victims are thought to have been from the same family.

The driver of the refrigerat­ed goods truck, which was owned by Big Chill Distributi­on, suffered minor injuries and was discharged from hospital by yesterday evening.

A friend described him as the “nicest, most humble man in the world”.

The people in the van travelled from the upper North Island to Dunedin late last week and attended a funeral.

They were on their way home when the crash happened. The refrigerat­ed truck was en route to Christchur­ch with a load of goods.

State Highway 1 between Picton and Blenheim was closed until late yesterday while police tried to piece together what had happened.

Debris was strewn across the road while the truck had to be pulled from a railside ditch where it had come to rest on its side.

It was unclear what caused the van to cross the centreline.

The crash happened on the same bend where Picton man Gary Kenny

died in a head-on collision with a truck in March 2020.

Acting Tasman district commander Inspector Paul Borrell described the scene as ‘‘absolute carnage’’.

‘‘In a blink of an eye, seven lives are gone,’’ Borrell told media outside Blenheim police station yesterday afternoon.

‘‘A crash of this scale has a huge impact on the community where it happens, that of the deceased’s family and community, and on emergency services who attend.’’

Picton Volunteer Fire Brigade chief fire officer Wayne Wytenburg said the scene was ‘‘absolutely horrific’’.

‘‘I am lost for words to describe what our emergency services had to deal with,’’ Wytenburg said yesterday morning.

Big Chill Distributi­on chief executive Michael Roberts said the company was ‘‘devastated’’ about the crash.

‘‘We are and will continue to work with our contractor­s and the police to assist while they carry out the investigat­ion.

Our immediate focus at this stage is providing assistance and ongoing support to the driver.’’

The crash is the deadliest in New Zealand since eight people were killed in a crash near Taupo¯ in April 2019.

It is the worst in the South Island in more than two decades.

In June 2000, six members of one family died when their van collided with a meat truck on State Highway 1 at Wairuna in South Otago.

In August last year, five teenage boys – Javarney Wayne Drummond, 15, Andrew George Goodger, 15, Niko William Hill, 15, Joseff Alan James McCarthy, 16, and Jack Graeme Wallace, 16 – were killed in a crash near Timaru. In April, Tyreese Stuart Fleming pleaded guilty in the High Court to five charges of dangerous driving causing death. He will be sentenced on June 29.

New Zealand’s worst crash was in Northland in February, 1963, when a bus carrying 35 passengers home from seeing the Queen at Waitangi crashed over a 30-metre slope, killing 15 people. A brake failure caused the bus to careen down a cliff off the Brynderwyn hills.

Yesterday’s tragedy brings the national road toll to 184 so far this year – 27 more than at the same time last year.

 ?? BRYA INGRAM/STUFF ?? Emergency services work at the scene of a crash between south of Picton that left seven people dead yesterday.
BRYA INGRAM/STUFF Emergency services work at the scene of a crash between south of Picton that left seven people dead yesterday.
 ?? ?? Seven people in this van were killed when it collided with a truck. Another two people in the van were injured – one critically and one seriously.
Seven people in this van were killed when it collided with a truck. Another two people in the van were injured – one critically and one seriously.
 ?? ?? The refrigerat­ed truck was en route to Christchur­ch and slid into a ditch.
The refrigerat­ed truck was en route to Christchur­ch and slid into a ditch.

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