When an Egged bus crashed into a parked truck on Israel’s Highway 1 on the way to Jerusalem this Sunday, Sarah Sperling was among the more than a dozen people injured in the accident that killed 6.
The 20-year-old, the hospital reported, improved significantly on Wednesday and is now classified as moderately wounded and in stable condition. She is still on an artificial respirator and is put to sleep with anesthetics.
Sperling is to undergo an additional surgery Wednesay at Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center where she is hospitalized.
Many people have been praying for Sperling (Sarah bat Dina), who was set to be married within two weeks.
The six people who lost their lives in the crash are Ya’akov Meir Heshin (27) and Yisrael Weinberg (26), Leah Malmud (61), Aharon Mordechai Cohen (18), Chaya Pasha Frenkel (23), and Levy Yitzhak Amdadi (17) – zichronam livracha.
The bus driver, Chaim Biton, was arrested early Monday morning on suspicion of negligent manslaughter in the crash and is now also suspected of obstruction of justice for tampering with the black box. This is not Biton’s first accident of this nature, as he similarly hit a truck and caused several injuries near the Shoresh Interchange in 2013.
“Shortly after the crash, even as the bodies were laid out and the wounded were shouting, the driver found his way towards the tachograph, and did several activities which we are currently checking what their impact was,” said Be’eri.
A tachograph is installed on buses and keeps a history log of recent activity of the vehicle and the driver, such as the driving speed, driving hours, rest hours and details on the driver.
A commander in the traffic police talked about the danger of cell phone use while driving amid suspicion that Biton was on his phone at the time of the crash.
“We all transgress in driving while being distracted. We’re all in our phones. People who use a smart phone – that smart phone kills them. We see those killed in traffic accidents with the phone in their hands, we see in investigation that they were using their cell phones,” said the commander.
Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud) argued that “the bus driver drove with criminal negligence and he needs to be held responsible. With all due respect, a driver needs to be responsible for his driving.”
“We must not relieve the drivers from responsibility and therefore we will work in the government to bring in life-saving warning devices. According to all research, when there are these sensors present there is a reduction in the number of wounded.”