Senior Reporter
sascha.wilson@guardian.co.tt
Although the Government has awarded him a $1 million ex-gratia payment, Christopher Boodram, the lone survivor of the 2022 Paria Fuel diving tragedy, says his battle for justice is far from over.
Nearly four years after the tragic incident claimed the lives of his four colleagues, Boodram said yesterday he was still waiting for those responsible for failing to rescue them to be held accountable.
In an interview with Guardian Media at his home, Boodram said, “Is four years, and nobody lost their job. Nobody was jailed. And I think this corporate manslaughter charge in Trinidad and Tobago is really nonsensical because this is just a fine. And, for companies like Paria, a couple hundred thousand or a million is nothing.”
Lamenting that the last four years have been emotionally, physically, spiritually, and financially challenging, he noted that his legal battle with Paria is still ongoing.
Thanking the United National Congress (UNC) Government for the ex-gratia payment and describing it as a gesture of good faith, Boodram said,”I still have my legal matter before the court, and I would like to urge Paria to come forward with a settlement. It’s been four long years, and everybody wants to close this chapter of their life.”
Boodram’s colleagues, Rishi Nagassar, Kazim Ali Junior, Fyzal Kurban, and Yusuf Henry, all Land and Marine Construction Services (LMCS) workers, lost their lives when they were sucked into a 30-inch underwater pipeline while performing maintenance at Berth No 6 in the Pointe-à-Pierre Harbour on February 25, 2022.
Though Boodram survived, he said he has been plagued with nightmares and unable to return to work.
“From it (nightmares) being every night, now it’s not every night, but it’s still there. Sometimes I still jolt out of sleep, breathing hard, just reliving the whole experience again,” he said.
Looking ahead, Boodram is calling on the Government to implement the recommendations of the Jerome Lynch-led Commission of Inquiry into the Paria tragedy and ensure proper oversight and accountability in the energy sector.
“I think we need a marine emergency response—people who are equipped for a dive rescue, for a boat flipping over, a barge sinking—because we are an industrial nation and we have so much of platforms out there,” he said.
On Thursday, Boodram and the families of Rishi Nagassar and Fyzal Kurban received cheques for ex-gratia payments of $1m each from the Government.
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar said payments for the remaining families will be made in due course.
Charges under the Occupational Safety and Health Act were laid against Paria Fuel, two of its officials, LMCS, and its director Kazim Ali Snr. The Privy Council, however, has ruled that they were laid outside the limitation period.
Meanwhile, former Prime Minister Stuart Young yesterday said he was happy that the ex-gratia payments, which were a commitment under his People’s National Movement (PNM) government, were finally awarded.
He recalled explaining to the public then the difficulties and frustrations the government faced in trying to go through legal means to ensure the families received some financial assistance while their court matters were still proceeding.
“I think the population will see and they can make their own judgements as to the type of politics that were played out. But I am happy that those two families got the money that Cabinet decided in April 2025 they should get, as an ex-gratia payment,” said Young.
