No “cover-up committee!”
The Sharma probe team’s report on the recent accident at Paria Fuel Trading Company Limited’s compound must be published in its entirety and fully scrutinised by Parliament.
“And it must also go thorough Parliament’s standing team on Energy and Energy Affairs,” UNC MP Rudy Indarsingh further added at yesterday’s media briefing.
Indarsingh said the briefing was UNC’s analysis of the accident from the Opposition’s point of view.
Indarsingh said tomorrow’s International Women’s Day would find some females without their husbands, brothers and sons who died in the incident.
On February 25, LMCS divers Fyzal Kurban, Kazim Ali Jr, Yusuff Henry, Rishi Nagassar and Christopher Boodram were sucked into a Paria pipeline on which they were working.
Their bodies of four of the divers were recovered last week. Christopher Boodram survived.
Energy Minister Stuart Young subsequently announced a team headed by attorney Shiv Sharma to probe the incident.
Indarsingh said Young should also say if the Occupational Health and Safety Act will be amended to have stiffer penalties if health/safety is breached ahead.
UNC MP Dinesh Rambally agreed there must be assurances the team’s findings will be made public, and any gaps fixed.
Indarsingh said the full report must be presented to Parliament since Government’s track record on probes and reports had engendered little trust in the administration. Plus he said, UNC maintains concern on the team’s composition.
Indarsingh claimed Government did not answer questions posed in the 2017 ferry investigation report: that a report on a July 2020 community recovery issue wasn’t made public, nor was any report on the 2021 Niquan explosion probe.
He felt the team probing the recent accident was a “defence team” which will “defend a Government appointed board.”
Making certain allegations about Paria chairman Newman George and the Prime Minister, he said he felt the probe would not be truly independent and would be a “cover up committee.”
Indarsingh reiterated the UNC’s call for team member Eugene Tiah to step down since he said Young never disclosed he represented Tiah in an Evolving Technologies and Development court issue.
Indarsingh claimed the situation with Tiah “opened the door to government manipulation and cover up.”
He said UNC would continue pressure for Tiah to step down, “Is Tiah a closet PNM, independent PNM or a card-bearing PNM member?”
Indarsingh also asked who on the team was qualified to enter the pipeline where the divers were.
He added there was concern about the team’s experience with deep sea welding and underwater work operation.
UNC MP Rushton Paray, also concerned about “lack of underwater experience” on the team, felt their terms of reference were a “pre meditated decision, heavily slanted to absolve Paria from any responsibility and negligence” and were designed to hold LMCS to account and “be blamed.”
He said he felt the truth might not emerge.
Paray felt the probe must include Paria’s Health and Safety practices since Paria had a duty to have H&S plans “none of which seemed to be present.”
Indarsingh said UNC got reports of alleged compromised H&S protocols at Paria.
He urged Paria workers to have a day of solidarity, down tools, assemble, speak out and send a message to management to address H&S.