HomeInfrastructureRoadsGrand Gedeh County: Bad Roads In Southeastern Liberia Leaves One Passenger Dead

Grand Gedeh County: Bad Roads In Southeastern Liberia Leaves One Passenger Dead

Grand Gedeh County – A man believed to be in his mid-40s identified as James Baryee has died along the Ganta-Zwedru highway after a vehicle, he was trying to pull out of the mud, somersaulted and severely injured him. 

Baryee, a former employee of the SLD Associate Agriculture Company, was helping several others to pull out of the mud an SUV which had been stuck for a day due to the bad road condition, eyewitnesses told a Local Voices Liberia reporter in Grand Gedeh County after the incident.

The incident occurred on Tuesday, August 6 at 7:12 am in the swampy Kpelle Village of lower Grand Gedeh County. 

The Kpelle Village is along the Ganta-Zwedru highway, which has been in a deplorable condition for over two months as drivers of motor vehicles often struggle to use the road.

According to Martine Toe, a passenger who witnessed the incident, their vehicle got stuck in the mud at 3 am but they waited until the morning when several men including the deceased tried to pull it out. 

“We slept in this cold and mud, so early this morning we started helping the driver to pull the jeep from the mud and while doing so, the car somersaulted and all of us fell in the mud,” Toe explained.

Doris Brooks, another passenger on the vehicle, said she blamed the death of James on the government because of its refusal to properly maintain the road.

“Unfortunately, James went off [unconscious], so we managed to rush him to the Toe Town clinic where he was pronounced dead.”

“This particular Kpelle village corridor has been spoiled [damaged] since two months ago, the President and his officials, they can’t tell we the southeasterners that they have not seen this spot or heard about it on the Facebook or by radio and newspaper [that it has] been very bad, they are just not good,” ranted the businesswoman.

Eight passengers were on board the vehicle that left Monrovia for Maryland County.

According to some of the passengers, transportation fares have skyrocketed to L$10,000 from Monrovia to the southeast mainly due to the condition of the road. 

Senkpeni
Senkpenihttps://localvoicesliberia.com/
Alpha Daffae Senkpeni is a multi-media journalist and fact checker with over 18 years’ experience. Senkpeni is the Director and Senior Editor of Local Voices Liberia (LVL) – a network that operates Liberia’s major independent fact checking desk. LVL has implemented several media development projects funded by USAID and the European Union. Since 2021, he has led the organization’s implementation of fact checking projects including fact checking workshops for journalists, media literacy programs, and community forums – all geared toward countering disinformation and expanding the culture of fact checking. Senkpeni holds a law degree from the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law and a BSc in Mass Communications from the University of Liberia. He’s also an alumnus of the Radio Netherlands Training Center (RNTC) with a certificate in Digital Content to Counter Disinformation. He has also attended several fact checking trainings.
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