Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Driver in fatal Tampines accident charged with 4 offences including dangerous driving causing death

SINGAPORE — A 42-year-old driver was charged on Thursday (April 25) for his involvement in a multi-vehicle accident in Tampines on Monday that claimed two lives.

Muhammad Syafie Ismail outside the State Courts on April 25, 2024.

Muhammad Syafie Ismail outside the State Courts on April 25, 2024.

Follow TODAY on WhatsApp
New: You can now listen to articles.
Sorry, the audio is unavailable right now. Please try again later.

This audio is AI-generated.

  • Muhammad Syafie Ismail, 42, was charged in relation to a fatal multi-vehicle accident in Tampines
  • He faces four charges under the Road Traffic Act, including dangerous driving causing death and failing to stop after an accident 
  • The accident resulted in two deaths and six other people being taken to hospital 
  • The man is out on bail of S$30,000 and will be electronically tagged 

SINGAPORE — A 42-year-old driver was charged on Thursday (April 25) for his involvement in a multi-vehicle accident in Tampines on Monday that claimed two lives.

Muhammad Syafie Ismail faces four charges under the Road Traffic Act. They are:

  • Dangerous driving causing death
  • Dangerous driving causing hurt
  • Dangerous driving, and
  • Failing to stop after an accident 

TODAY understands that Syafie was driving a black Saab that was caught on in-car footage speeding and sideswiping a white car before a junction on Monday.

Syafie was arrested after his discharge from hospital on Wednesday.

The police said on Wednesday that his driving licence had also been suspended and investigations are ongoing for other possible offences. 

On Thursday, the prosecution told the court that more charges may be tendered, pending medical reports. They sought a four-week adjournment for the case. 

Appearing in court, Syafie stated that he was planning to engage legal counsel, but had not decided whether he would apply for a lawyer from the Public Defender's Office or if he would engage a private lawyer.  

The Public Defender's Office provides criminal defence aid to people facing non-capital charges who cannot afford a lawyer.

He is out on bail of S$30,000 and will return to court for a pre-trial conference on June 7.

In addition to his travel documents that have been surrendered to the police, Syafie was ordered not to interfere with or contact any witness or otherwise obstruct the course of justice as a condition of his bail.

He must also report to the investigation officer as and when required. 

The prosecution also requested that Syafie be electronically tagged (e-tag), in light of the severity of his charges and concerns that he was a flight risk. 

In response, Syafie said: "I don't think it's a necessary thing to put an e-tag because all my documents have already been seized by the police.

"I am already on bail. I am present today and I will be present also for all the court matters, but it's up to the court to make the decision."

In reply, the prosecution added that Syafie's fourth charge of failing to stop after an accident suggested "poor conduct" and an element of flight risk.

The judge ordered him to be electronically tagged. 

If found guilty of dangerous driving causing death, Syafie could be jailed for up to eight years, with a minimum sentence of two years, and face disqualification from driving all classes of vehicles. 

Anyone found guilty of dangerous driving causing hurt can be jailed for up to two years, or fined up to S$10,000, or both, and disqualified from driving all classes of vehicles.

If convicted of dangerous driving, an offender can be jailed for up to 12 months or be fined up to S$5,000, or both.

For failing to stop after an accident, Syafie could be jailed for up to three months or be fined up to S$1,000, or both.

WHAT HAPPENED 

At around 7am on Monday, an accident involving six vehicles occurred at the junction of Tampines Avenue 1 and Tampines Avenue 4.

The police said that they were alerted to the crash, which involved four cars, a van and a minibus, at about 7.05am. 

The accident resulted in two deaths — that of 17-year-old Temasek Junior College student Afifah Munirah Muhammad Azril, a passenger in a car, and 57-year-old Norzihan Juwahib, a passenger in a van who worked at pest control firm First Choice Pest Specialist.  

Six others were taken to hospital while conscious:

  • Syafie
  • Mr Weng Haifeng, 42, a car driver
  • Mr Chia Tong Chai, 64, a van driver
  • An 11-year-old male car passenger
  • An 11-year-old male minibus passenger
  • A 48-year-old male car driver

TODAY is not naming the two boys identified in court documents to protect their identities.

The 48-year-old car driver is believed to be the junior college student's father, Mr Muhammad Azril Mahmood, whose family members last told TODAY that he was conscious in hospital with injuries. 

Mr Mohammad Azman Mohd Enjah, 39, a van passenger, and Ms Lee Yau Meng, 42, a car driver, sought medical attention on their own.

Court documents showed that Syafie was travelling along Bedok Reservoir Road towards Tampines Avenue 4 that morning when he made an abrupt lane change from the second lane to the first lane of the two-lane road to overtake another car on the second lane.

He then allegedly filtered back acutely into the second lane, resulting in a side-swipe collision with the car, causing it to veer to the left and its left front and rear tires to graze the left kerb.

He was also charged with failing to stop after the accident with the said car along Bedok Reservoir Road.

Syafie then allegedly failed to stop to a red light signal while along Bedok Reservoir Road towards Tampines Avenue 4. This resulted in a collision with a car travelling along Tampines Avenue 1 towards Tampines Avenue 10 at the traffic-light junction. 

His car also purportedly hit another car travelling along Tampines Avenue 1 towards Tampines Avenue 2 before "surging forward" to collide with a third car travelling along Tampines Avenue 1 towards Tampines Avenue 2, court documents stated.

The impact of the first collision caused the car he hit to spin and collide into a van, before overturning. This resulted in the van colliding into a minibus travelling along Tampines Avenue 1 towards Tampines Avenue 2.

The Singapore Civil Defence Force said on Monday that its personnel had found a person lying on the road with one leg trapped under the wheel of a car upon arrival, and hydraulic rescue equipment was used to free the person’s leg.

A video posted on the Singapore Road Vigilante Facebook page, allegedly taken moments before the accident, shows a black car speeding through the morning traffic.

The dashboard camera footage depicted the car swerving in and out of a two-way lane to overtake a white car on the left lane without signalling.

The man who posted the video, Mr Anthony Soon, who is a senior adviser at car repair and maintenance firm Success United, has filed a police report after receiving death threats against him and his family for posting the dashcam footage.

Mr Soon said that online users had mistaken him for the driver of a white Mercedes-Benz, which appears to have been sideswiped by Syafie’s black Saab. 

He told TODAY on Wednesday that he was not the driver of the Mercedes-Benz but had posted the footage on the Facebook page on behalf of the driver who did not have a social media account.

Other videos circulating on social media show the black Saab later beating a red light and crashing into other vehicles — one of which was the car of Afifah’s father.

Both Afifah and Norzihan were buried on Tuesday at the Pusara Aman Muslim cemetery.

More than 100 family and friends gathered to bid their final farewell to the Temasek Junior College student. Family members said that her father was under observation with kidney and spine related injuries.

Related topics

court crime accident Tampines death

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to our newsletter for the top features, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.