Bus driver who kept calm and drove on as passenger attacked him among Transport Gold Award winners

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Mr Muhammad Fawze Fazal, senior station manager at SMRT Trains; Mr Tham Kok Poi, bus captain with Tower Transit Singapore; and Mr Dandiyar Misro, senior customer service officer with SBS Transit are recipients of the Outstanding Award at the Transport Gold Awards.

(From left) SMRT Trains senior station manager Muhammad Fawze Fazal, Tower Transit bus captain Tham Kok Poi and SBS Transit senior customer service officer Dandiyar Misro are among recipients of the Outstanding Award at the Transport Gold Awards.

ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG

Follow topic:
  • Mr Tham Kok Poi from Tower Transit Singapore received an Outstanding Award for staying calm and ensuring the safety of 50 passengers after being attacked by a violent passenger.
  • Mr Dandiyar Misro from SBS Transit also won the Outstanding Award for shielding a teenager with autism from an aggressive passenger on a train.
  • Mr Muhammad Fawze Fazal from SMRT Trains received an Outstanding Award for performing CPR on an unconscious elderly passenger, demonstrating quick thinking.

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SINGAPORE –Tower Transit bus driver Tham Kok Poi had to endure three punches to his face and a torrent of verbal abuse while maintaining control of the bus as an emotionally unstable passenger attacked him and tried to grab the steering wheel.

With no time to react or make sense of the situation, he had one thing on his mind: to maintain a firm grip on the steering wheel and ensure the safety of some 50 passengers on the bus.

“When I was driving, I didn’t feel anything. I just knew I had to stay calm,” said the 50-year-old Malaysian bus driver in Mandarin.

“It was only after the incident when I had time to reflect on it that I felt fear. At the time (of the incident), I was just so worried that the passenger would take control of the steering wheel.”

Despite that, Mr Tham, a bus driver of six years, stayed calm and focused on driving safely before letting all the passengers alight at the next stop.

The passenger had turned violent because he wanted to alight from the bus, service 969, in the middle of Seletar Expressway, growing more agitated when Mr Tham told him he was unable to stop the bus before reaching the next stop in Punggol.

Mr Tham’s bravery during the incident, which took place in January, earned the Singapore permanent resident, along with 26 others, the Outstanding Award at the 26th edition of the Transport Gold Awards on Nov 18.

Tower Transit bus driver Tham Kok Poi endured punches and verbal abuse from a violent passenger while keeping a firm grip on the steering wheel and ensuring the safety of some 50 passengers on the bus.

ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG

The Outstanding Award is the top honour at the annual event organised by the Singa­pore Kindness Movement (SKM), the Land Transport Authority and their partners to celebrate exemplary workers in the transport industry. The 27 awards were given out by Acting Transport Minister Jeffrey Siow on Nov 18.

The Commendation Award went to 1,444 transport staff.

The recipients were chosen after a nomination and selection process involving their peers, supervisors and a panel of representatives from the authorities and SKM.

The violent passenger who attacked Mr Tham was

sentenced to 14 weeks and 10 days’ jail

in February.

Right after the incident, Mr Tham’s left cheek and ear swelled up. Even now, 10 months on, he still hears a ringing sound in his ear sometimes.

Tower Transit Singapore managing director Winston Toh said: “We are incredibly grateful to have bus captains like Mr Tham on our team. His story is one of resilience, professionalism and unwavering commitment to the people he serves every day.”

Mr Dandiyar Misro, a Singaporean SBS Transit senior customer service officer who stays on board driverless trains in case he has to take over operations during emergencies, also received the Outstanding Award.

He had intervened to protect a teenager with autism during an incident in October 2024 on a Downtown Line train travelling towards Expo station.

A passenger who had given up his seat for an elderly man mistakenly thought the teen had taken the seat instead.

Angered, the passenger grabbed the boy.

Noticing that the boy felt wronged and was visibly distressed, Mr Dandiyar, 55, took him away, towards the front of the train, while calming him down.

SBS Transit senior customer service officer Dandiyar Misro shielded a boy with autism from an aggressive passenger.

ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG

The senior customer service officer of almost three years also sat the boy down and tried to reassure him. It was then that he noticed the angry passenger speeding towards the boy, and he instinctively used his body to shield the boy from a punch.

No action was taken against the aggressive passenger, as Mr Dandiyar chose not to report the incident to his company since it arose from a misunderstanding and the man had wanted to give up his seat. 

After the incident, the boy’s sister wrote in to SBS Transit to praise Mr Dandiyar for his kind actions.

SBS Transit spokeswoman Grace Wu said the operator is immensely proud of its people for “serving passengers with heart” and “striving to make every journey a delight”.

Another Outstanding Award recipient was Mr Muhammad Fawze Fazal, a senior station manager at SMRT Trains based at Aljunied station.

In February, he performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on an elderly man who had fallen unconscious at the station.

Mr Fawze, 38, also demonstrated sensitivity and got his colleagues to move the elderly passenger’s young grandson away from the scene to avoid distressing the boy further.

SMRT Trains senior station manager Muhammad Fawze Fazal performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation on an elderly passenger who collapsed at Aljunied station.

ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG

The elderly man’s pulse had returned by the time the ambulance arrived.

Mr Fawze, who has been with SMRT for 14 years, is relieved that his efforts made a difference. But he also gave credit to the passers-by, such as a teacher who offered to take the elderly passenger’s grandson to school, and a nurse who helped with the CPR.

Mr Ngien Hoon Ping, group chief executive officer of SMRT, said these selfless acts of service and kindness play an important role in delivering safe and pleasant journeys across the transport operator’s network.

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