A grim wave of fatal traffic collisions has swept across The Bahamas, leaving seven people dead over just four days ending Tuesday, prompting top transportation officials to issue urgent appeals for safer driving as grieving families cope with one of the deadliest stretches of road fatalities the nation has seen in recent years.
The deadliest single incident unfolded early Sunday on Shirley Street in New Providence, near the intersection with Church Street. A vehicle carrying eight occupants veered off the road and slammed into a tree, killing four young women inside: 17-year-old Diamond Stubbs and 19-year-olds Betrica Brown, Stania Webb, and Evalena Johnson. Three male passengers and one additional female passenger were transported to local hospitals with injuries, and local reports confirm most of the group had been close friends since childhood.
The tragedy quickly sparked public scrutiny over the long-reported poor condition of Shirley Street’s pavement, with many residents questioning whether unaddressed road deterioration contributed to the crash. During press briefings following the incident, Works Minister Clay Sweeting pushed back against attempts to link the fatality to delayed infrastructure work, confirming that Shirley Street had already been prioritized for repaving prior to the crash. Sweeting emphasized that the string of recent deadly incidents across multiple islands points to excessive speeding as the core systemic issue driving the rise in fatalities, not underinvestment in specific roads.
“I don’t think it’s fair to any of us, to the grieving families, to try to frame this tragedy as a blame game right now,” Sweeting told reporters, pushing back on questions about the timeline for Shirley Street repairs. “Families are mourning the loss of their loved ones, and right now that is what matters most. This is not a moment to assign blame.”
Sweeting added that deadly crashes have not been isolated to New Providence, noting fatal incidents have been recorded across Abaco, Grand Bahama, and Andros in recent days. “This is a national concern centered on driver behavior and the dangerous speeds many motorists are traveling at,” he said. “I am strongly urging all drivers to slow down. We cannot afford to have more families grieving unnecessary deaths.”
The most recent fatality was recorded Tuesday morning, when a 23-year-old male driver died in a head-on two-vehicle collision on Coral Harbour Road near Odyssey Aviation. Assistant Superintendent Lakeisha Sawyer, who spoke to reporters at the crash site, told journalists that preliminary investigation indicates the victim’s vehicle spun out before the driver was ejected from the vehicle. Based on the severe damage to both vehicles, investigators have marked speed as a likely contributing factor.
Police confirmed that officers from the Western Division were called to the collision just before 7 a.m. The 23-year-old, driving a blue Suzuki Swift, was traveling south when he collided with a northbound black 2016 Kia Sorento operated by a 53-year-old woman. Emergency medical personnel pronounced the Suzuki driver dead at the scene, while the Kia driver was transported to a hospital for treatment; as of press time, her condition has not been updated. This crash brings The Bahamas’ total traffic fatalities for the year to 36, per records kept by The Tribune.
The four-day fatal spree began Saturday, when 26-year-old Nica Julien died after her Ford Focus overturned and crashed into a concrete utility pole on East Sunrise Highway in Grand Bahama. The following day brought the Shirley Street tragedy, and a Monday collision on Ernest Dean Highway in Spring City, Abaco, killed a 30-year-old man in a two-vehicle crash.
Unverified CCTV footage circulating widely on social media purports to capture the moments leading up to the Sunday Shirley Street crash. The footage shows a dark-colored vehicle traveling at high speed down a nearly empty stretch of road before hitting the tree, snapping the trunk and causing it to fall. Moments after impact, a man is seen exiting the vehicle with his head slumped forward, stumbling away from the wreck before bystanders approach to check on the remaining passengers. Police have not yet confirmed the authenticity of the video as the official investigation remains ongoing.
Addressing broader public frustration over widespread potholes and poor road conditions, particularly worsened by the recent rainy season, Sweeting outlined the Ministry of Works’ ongoing infrastructure efforts. He confirmed that over the past two years, the government has ramped up repaving work across New Providence, which has more than 1,000 miles of road in need of maintenance. The ministry has launched a public-private partnership with Baha Mar and contracted more than a dozen small local paving contractors to complete work across the island since January.
Looking ahead, Sweeting announced a new pothole patching method that will roll out within six months, boosting daily pothole repairs from the current five to 10 per day to 100 per day, dramatically increasing maintenance capacity to address longstanding road quality issues.
Sweeting and law enforcement officials have both joined in the renewed call for motorists to adhere to posted speed limits and prioritize road safety practices, as the nation enters a period of mourning for the seven recent victims.
