radhica.sookraj@guardian.co.tt
Attorney Prakash Ramadhar, who is representing the family interests of two LMCS divers, says he intends to write Paria Fuel Trading requesting the footage from a GoPro camera used inside the 30-inch diameter pipeline the day four divers were sucked into a vortex.
A 12-minute-long video believed to have been captured inside the pipeline in which five divers initially disappeared at Berth No 6, surfaced on March 10. The footage was recorded almost 10 hours after Kazim Ali Jr, Rishi Nagassar, Fyzal Kurban, Yusuf Henry and Christopher Boodram were sucked into a vortex between 2 pm to 3 pm at No. 36 sealine on February 25. Only Boodram survived the accident.
Speaking to Guardian Media yesterday, Ramadhar said, “It has been several weeks since we wrote to Paria and we have received no further communication or info from Paria.
“We are concerned about the integrity and preservation of evidence, where GoPro footage was put into social media. That is a troubling development and the court will peruse all of this and the truth will come out.”
He said he intends to write to Paria again next week, requesting that all documents and evidence be handed over. Paria has not answered questions from Guardian Media since the incident.
In an email, it sent, to questions soon after the tragedy, Paria said, “Unfortunately, at this time, Paria will not be able to respond to your questions as there is an ongoing OSHA investigation; the formal establishment of a Commission of Enquiry to inquire into the incident; and lawyers acting on behalf of certain persons affected by the incident have issued pre-action letters thereby initiating the civil litigation process.”
Paria added that it will “address all questions and issues arising out of or in connection with the incident in the appropriate fora in due course.”
The Occupational Safety and Health Agency has also remained mum on ongoing investigations. The agency had come under heavy fire for issuing prohibition notices almost two weeks after the incident occurred.
In an earlier interview, industrial expert Vishnu Ramjattan said it was quite possible that the men were alive in air pockets, as the air from the hyperbaric chamber would have been sucked into the pipeline.
On Thursday, attorney Gerald Ramdeen held a media conference and provided details of a private autopsy done by Dr Hubert Daisley on the body of Kazim Ali Junior, which revealed he was possibly alive inside the pipeline for up to 39 hours after the incident. The official death certificate gave February 28 as the day of Ali’s death but did not give an estimated time of death.
Ramdeen also called for the CoE into the divers’ tragedy to be scrapped.
Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, SC, has been named as the Senior Legal Counsel for the commission, which will be headed by Jamaica Sir Dennis Morrison.
On Thursday, Maharaj also gave the assurance that as the lead counsel, he was committed to working towards having the commencement of the enquiry expedited.
“As senior counsel, I commit to doing what is necessary to have an expedited process and I will work with the chairman and other commissioners to have the process expedited. I am of the firm view that the issues which led to the enquiry are of great public importance,” Maharaj said.
Attorney Anand Ramlogan is representing the interests of Vanessa Kussie and survivor Christopher Boodram while Ramadhar is representing the families of Kurban and Henry’s first-born daughter and her mother.
Efforts to contact the OSH Agency for information on the ongoing probe were unsuccessful as emails and WhatsApp messages sent to communications manager Kendall Reid went unanswered.
CoP Jacob gets interim report on matter
Public Information officer of the TTPS, ASP Sheridon Hill, said yesterday that an interim report on the diving tragedy has been submitted to acting Police Commissioner McDonald Jacob.
“The matter is still under investigation. An interim report was submitted by Insp Morales to the Senior Supt Southern Division and then the Commissioner of Police. The investigation is still ongoing. We cannot comment on the details of the investigation but we can say it is still ongoing,” Hill said.
Pressed further on when the officers might complete their probe, Hill said he could not say.