A CAR rammed into a tree in Bedok yesterday morning, leaving the driver with serious head injuries in the second such major accident in just over a week.
Police said the black Mitsubishi Lancer skidded off Bedok North Road around 11am, slamming into the tree.
The impact crushed the driver's side of the car, trapping a man in his late 20s inside.
Rescuers from the Singapore Civil Defence Force used a hydraulic cutter to free the man, who also suffered multiple cuts on his legs.
On Thursday last week, two men died when the Subaru WRX they were in hit a tree along Guillemard Road, splitting the car in half.
Yesterday, the accident left the Mitsubishi in a mangled heap. One half of the windscreen was completely shattered, while the rest lay in shards in a nearby ditch, alongside the rear-view mirror and licence plate.
The bumper had also been completely ripped off.
Police are investigating the cause of the accident.
A 2006 study by the International Society of Arboriculture, a group that studies the growth and development of trees, found that drivers and passengers are more likely to be injured in an accident with a tree than another car.
That is because trees are stationary, rigid and do not absorb the impact of a crash.