SINGAPORE - The woman who tried to save her boyfriend in the fiery Tanjong Pagar crash is out of intensive care and stable, said the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) in an update on Tuesday (Feb 23).
Ms Raybe Oh Siew Huey, 26, is in a high dependency ward. The Straits Times understands she is conscious and that her family is with her. She has been fighting for her life since the accident on Saturday (Feb 13).
Her boyfriend, Mr Jonathan Long, was driving the white BMW which slammed into a Tanjong Pagar shophouse at around 5.40am.
The 29-year-old was killed along with four others in the car - Mr Eugene Yap, 29; Mr Elvin Tan Yong Hao, 28; Mr Wilson Teo Qi Xiang, 26; and Mr Gary Wong Hong Chieh, 29.
Ms Oh, a former Singapore Airlines air stewardess, had tried to save her boyfriend and friends from the car, which was engulfed in flames.
She suffered severe burns on about 80 per cent of her body as a result, but was conscious when she was taken to SGH by ambulance.
Mr Akira Chan, 21, a friend of the group, said Ms Oh had rush to the burning wreck without hesitation.
"She tried to open the door and was injured in the process," he said. "She was trying to save her fiance."
Mr Long and Ms Oh had recently applied for a Housing Board flat together.
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In an interview with Shin Min Daily News, Mr Long's 62-year-old father said the family has kept Ms Oh in their thoughts even as they struggle to cope with the death of their son.
"I treat her as my own daughter and I hope that she will be safe," he said. "She is really a very good girl, and we will do our best to take care of her."
He added that he has been in touch with Ms Oh's mother to provide support.
Ms Oh, who was born in Malaysia, began singing getai at the age of 16 and was a polytechnic student in Singapore.
In a 2013 interview with The Straits Times when she was a polytechnic student, she said she performed at getai shows to earn money for school fees to lighten her father's financial burden.
Getai organiser Aaron Tan had in an earlier interview described Ms Oh as a quiet and petite person who appeared to be timid, but was actually very independent and had a big heart.
The 45-year-old said the getai community was shocked when they heard the news.
Mr Tan added: "She did what she did for love and it was a selfless act that not everybody could do. It was a commendable thing."
This article was first published in The Straits Times. Permission required for reproduction.