Senior Reporter
dareece.polo@guardian.co.tt
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley has given the assurance that the Commission of Enquiry (CoE) report into the Paria Fuel diving tragedy will be made public once it is reviewed by Cabinet.
Dr Rowley made the announcement during a media briefing at the Diplomatic Centre in St Ann’s yesterday, on his return from London where he met with energy companies.
As he addressed members of the public during the conference, which was live-streamed, Dr Rowley attempted to quell concerns that the report would be altered once it reached Government officials.
“I find that to be an impertinence. The Cabinet of Trinidad and Tobago is the place where the business of the people of Trinidad and Tobago is conducted by responsible representatives,” he said.
“It’s going to the Cabinet, the Cabinet will look at it and it will come to the Parliament at the earliest. So, this question about the report being sanitised, absolute nonsense! There is no intention whatsoever to have anything done to the report in the context of sanitising and protecting A, B, C or D,” he added.
The 380-page final report at the conclusion of the $15 million enquiry, was handed over to President Christine Kangaloo by CoE Chairman Jerome Lynch, KC, on November 30.
Kangaloo also received tens of thousands of documents, video material, voluminous correspondence and transcripts of evidence on a hard drive.
The report investigated the circumstances surrounding the deaths of employees of the Land and Marine Contracting Services (LMCS), divers Fyzal Kurban, Yusuf Henry, Kazim Ali Jr and Rishi Nagassar. The four died after being sucked into a 30-inch pipeline on February 25, 2022, during maintenance work on Paria’s Sealine 36 pipeline at Berth No.6 in the Pointe-a-Pierre harbour.
The lone survivor and fellow diver, Christopher Boodram, was rescued after sustaining serious injuries. Boodram later said the men were alive but could not get out.
In January, the commission’s attorney, Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, SC, called for the report to be published and laid in Parliament. Similar calls were made by the victims’ families.
CLICO CoE in trouble
after over $100m spent
The Prime Minister is also considering the discontinuation of the CoE into the collapse of CL Financial, the parent company of CLICO, and the Hindu Credit Union.
As he made his case, Rowley said the enquiry, led by Sir Anthony Colman, cost the State well over $100 million with no report expected in the near future.
He likened it to the Justice Lionel Seemungal CoE into the overselling of tickets for the 1989 World Cup match at the Hasely Crawford Stadium. He recalled that the enquiry was discontinued by then Prime Minister Patrick Manning after the principal actor was not summoned to be questioned for years.
“A similar situation exists with the Colman enquiry and the Government will have to take a decision because after the last time I inquired, the figure that I seem to recall is 100-plus million dollars spent on that enquiry and I don’t know of a single page of any report produced by it,” he said.
The Prime Minister claimed the recipient of that largesse accosted him for a payment of $45 million. Asked what had been submitted, he said he was told the company read 30 million pages of Clico documents.
“If we have spent over $100 million in scanning every page in Clico’s history, how much we intend to pay to have them read? And the people of T&T will have to take a decision as to whether this largesse should continue or whether we should cut our losses because this is 2009 this whole thing started. It is now 2023 and I am minded to advise the Cabinet to put an end to this,” he said.