Grocott's Mail
  • NEWS
    • Courts & Crime
    • Features
    • Politics
    • People
    • Health & Well-being
  • SPORT
    • News
    • Results
    • Sports Diary
    • Club Contacts
    • Columns
    • Sport Galleries
    • Sport Videos
  • OPINION
    • Election Connection
    • Makana Voices
    • Deur ‘n Gekleurde Bril
    • Newtown… Old Eyes
    • Incisive View
    • Your Say
  • ARTSLIFE
    • Makana Sharp!
    • Visual Art
    • Literature
    • Food & Fun
    • Festivals
    • Community Arts
    • Going Places
  • OUR TOWN
    • What’s on
    • Spiritual
    • Emergency & Well-being
    • Safety
    • Civic
    • Municipality
    • Weather
    • Properties
      • Grahamstown Properties
    • Your Town, Our Town
  • OUTSIDE
    • Enviro News
    • Gardening
    • Farming
    • Science
    • Conservation
    • Motoring
    • Pets/Animals
  • ECONOMIX
    • Business News
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Personal Finance
  • EDUCATION
    • Education NEWS
    • Education OUR TOWN
    • Education INFO
  • Covid-19
  • EDITORIAL
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Vehicle dealership drives Winter Warmers initiative
  • Shakespeare has been outdone
  • Get your passport blessed 
  • Yes, it changed us
  • The Enyobeni Tavern tragedy: lessons for our own municipality
  • The spirit of Africa in indigenous African instruments
  • A laugh a day keeps the end of fest blues away
  • The hole left by absent fathers
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Grocott's Mail
Cue Media
  • NEWS
    • Courts & Crime
    • Features
    • Politics
    • People
    • Health & Well-being
  • SPORT
    • News
    • Results
    • Sports Diary
    • Club Contacts
    • Columns
    • Sport Galleries
    • Sport Videos
  • OPINION
    • Election Connection
    • Makana Voices
    • Deur ‘n Gekleurde Bril
    • Newtown… Old Eyes
    • Incisive View
    • Your Say
  • ARTSLIFE
    • Makana Sharp!
    • Visual Art
    • Literature
    • Food & Fun
    • Festivals
    • Community Arts
    • Going Places
  • OUR TOWN
    • What’s on
    • Spiritual
    • Emergency & Well-being
    • Safety
    • Civic
    • Municipality
    • Weather
    • Properties
      • Grahamstown Properties
    • Your Town, Our Town
  • OUTSIDE
    • Enviro News
    • Gardening
    • Farming
    • Science
    • Conservation
    • Motoring
    • Pets/Animals
  • ECONOMIX
    • Business News
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Personal Finance
  • EDUCATION
    • Education NEWS
    • Education OUR TOWN
    • Education INFO
  • Covid-19
  • EDITORIAL
Grocott's Mail
You are at:Home»Uncategorized»Luyolo starts long road to recovery
Uncategorized

Luyolo starts long road to recovery

_Gr0cCc0Tts_By _Gr0cCc0Tts_December 5, 2013No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Broken bones, torn muscles, dislocations and two months away from his home and family are what 7-year-old Luyolo Songelwa has had to endure after being hit by a speeding vehicle.

Broken bones, torn muscles, dislocations and two months away from his home and family are what 7-year-old Luyolo Songelwa has had to endure after being hit by a speeding vehicle.

Luyolo, who was hit by a bakkie near his Extension 6 home earlier this year, has returned home after two months in a Port Elizabeth hospital.

The Grade 2 NV Cewu Primary School pupil is using crutches and wears a special boot with a raised sole to compensate for shortening in his left leg caused by the trauma.

Luyolo's life changed on 18 October when he was walking alongside a neighbourhood street with his best friend's grandfather. They had just left Luyolo's best friend at school.

A bakkie missed a turn and spiralled out of control, snatching Luyolo from the anguished grandfather as its bull-bar struck him. Its wheels ran over him and he was dragged along as the bakkie ripped through the boundary fences of three houses beside to the road.

Luyolo was rushed to Settler' Hospital, but due to the severity of his injuries, which required specialist attention, he was transferred to Livingstone Hospital in Port Elizabeth.

His mother, Ntombekhaya Songelwa, said doctors told her Luyolo's bones had been crushed and the impact meant he had lost some of the bone structure.

Both Luyolo's legs were broken and both knee caps were dislocated, as well as his collar bone.

Although Luyolo is back from hospital, he is still getting treatment. Ntombekhaya said Luyolo still needed frequent check ups and physiotherapy.

She said the doctors had told her they weren't sure whether Luyolo would walk again. She said processes were under way for a claim against the Road Accident Fund.

The family has not opened a case against the driver of the vehicle.

Previous ArticleKoopkoors by die kersmark
Next Article Free food, fair elections?
_Gr0cCc0Tts_

Related Posts

Johan Carinus tree planting

Learn music fit for a king

First place for Malawian journalist- Need to upload Pix

Comments are closed.

Cue for you!
Cue for you!
Cue for you!
Tweets by Grocotts
Newsletter



Listen

The Rhodes University Community Engagement Division has launched Engagement in Action, a new podcast which aims to bring to life some of the many ways in which the University interacts with communities around it. Check it out below.

Latest video

Weather    |     About     |     Advertise     |     Subscribe     |     Contact     |     Support Grocott’s Mail

© 2022 Maintained by School of Journalism & Media Studies.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.