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Thursday, April 24, 2025

Pressure mounts as UNC, MSJ want Paria board fired

... DPP yet to view CoE report into diving tragedy

by

KAY-MARIE FLETCHER
458 days ago
20240122

Se­nior Re­porters

kay-marie.fletch­er@guardian.co.tt; sascha.wil­son@guardian.co.tt

The Unit­ed Na­tion­al Con­gress (UNC) and the Move­ment for So­cial Jus­tice are now call­ing for the en­tire board of ex­ec­u­tives at the Paria Fu­el Trad­ing Com­pa­ny to re­sign with im­me­di­ate ef­fect or be fired over its neg­li­gence in the div­ing tragedy at its fa­cil­i­ty in 2022.

Paria’s board of di­rec­tors in­clude Fayad Ali, Avie Chadee, Pe­ter Clarke, Eu­stace Nan­cis, Reza Sal­im and chair­man New­man George.

Fol­low­ing rec­om­men­da­tions com­ing out of the Com­mis­sion of En­quiry’s (CoE) re­port for the com­pa­ny to be charged with cor­po­rate manslaugh­ter aris­ing out of the tragedy, in which four divers dies, the Op­po­si­tion said yes­ter­day that the ex­ec­u­tives were the per­pe­tra­tors and as a re­sult, they should all be brought to jus­tice for their un­will­ing­ness to do all they could to save the lives of the men.

Dur­ing a me­dia con­fer­ence at the Of­fice of the Op­po­si­tion in Port-of-Spain yes­ter­day, Barataria MP Sad­dam Ho­sein not­ed that even if the com­pa­ny is charged with the of­fence of cor­po­rate manslaugh­ter, it does not mean any­one will go to jail.

He said the var­i­ous sen­tences as­so­ci­at­ed with cor­po­rate manslaugh­ter are lim­it­ed to a fine. This fine, he said, will ul­ti­mate­ly be paid by the state.

Ho­sein said, “Four cit­i­zens of this coun­try have died. The board of Paria must be fired and or re­sign forth­with. They must not re­ceive an­oth­er cent of tax­pay­ers’ dol­lars af­ter pre­sid­ing over the cat­a­stroph­ic deaths of these four divers.

“In fact, none of these di­rec­tors must sit on any oth­er state en­ter­prise. They have in­fect­ed Paria with con­duct that is con­sid­ered crim­i­nal… The neg­li­gence of Paria con­vert­ed a state-owned fa­cil­i­ty in­to a crime scene.”

He al­so called on Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley and Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Fitzger­ald Hinds to de­mand the res­ig­na­tion of all board mem­bers if they do not re­sign im­me­di­ate­ly.

En­er­gy Min­is­ter Stu­art Young laid the CoE re­port in­to the deaths of LM­CS divers Rishi Na­gas­sar, Kaz­im Ali Jr, Fyzal Kur­ban and Yusuf Hen­ry in Par­lia­ment on Fri­day. The men were sucked in­to a 30-inch un­der­wa­ter pipeline while con­duct­ing main­te­nance works at Berth No.6 in the Pointe-a-Pierre har­bour in Feb­ru­ary 2022.

The CoE’s re­port, which rec­om­mend­ed Paria be charged with cor­po­rate manslaugh­ter and was high­ly crit­i­cal of its treat­ment of the men’s fam­i­lies and lone sur­vivor Christo­pher Boodram, has since been for­ward­ed to Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions (DPP) Roger Gas­pard.

MSJ leader David Ab­du­lah al­so made a sim­i­lar call at a vir­tu­al me­dia con­fer­ence yes­ter­day, where he slammed the con­duct of Paria ex­ec­u­tives af­ter the fa­tal pipeline ac­ci­dent and their treat­ment of the de­ceased divers’ fam­i­lies and the sur­vivor.

He charged, “All of them who were board mem­bers on Feb­ru­ary of 2022 must be fired. They have to take re­spon­si­bil­i­ty as the board of di­rec­tors. They must be fired and they must nev­er sit on a state board again.

“We are mak­ing that ab­solute­ly clear. New­man George and oth­ers who were di­rec­tors of Paria on 25th of Feb­ru­ary 2022 when those four men died in the pipeline af­ter suf­fer­ing for hours...”

He said Boodram and the be­reaved fam­i­lies re­ceived not “one red cent” while the Paria ex­ec­u­tives con­tin­ue to re­ceive their salaries.

“That is not on­ly moral­ly wrong, it is a trav­es­ty of hu­man­i­ty, as the com­mis­sion­er of in­quiry said, it is rep­re­hen­si­ble, ab­solute­ly rep­re­hen­si­ble that the fam­i­lies of the four men and the sur­vivor got not a red cent in the last 23 months while board mem­bers were col­lect­ing thou­sands of dol­lars in fees. They should have tak­en mon­ey out of their own pock­et to give to the fam­i­lies, quite apart from Paria giv­ing the fam­i­lies mon­ey.”

If the law does not per­mit Collin Piper and oth­ers to be crim­i­nal­ly charged, he said the least that should hap­pen is that they be fired with no ter­mi­nal ben­e­fits.

Ab­du­lah al­so called on Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions Roger Gas­pard to take im­me­di­ate steps to act on the rec­om­men­da­tion of the CoE re­port that Paria be held li­able.

He said, “All the ev­i­dence is there. The work of the Com­mis­sion of In­quiry, the ver­ba­tim ev­i­dence, the phys­i­cal ev­i­dence in terms of doc­u­men­ta­tion and oth­er things, all are there in the pub­lic do­main. The DPP does not have to launch an­oth­er in­ves­ti­ga­tion in­to an­oth­er in­ves­ti­ga­tion. The po­lice don’t have to start an­oth­er in­ves­ti­ga­tion. The ev­i­dence is there, charge Paria with cor­po­rate manslaugh­ter.”

He said this will be an im­por­tant mark­er for all com­pa­nies go­ing for­ward that they can be held li­able for the deaths of em­ploy­ees or work­ers ei­ther em­ployed by them or through con­trac­tors.

Ab­du­lah al­so called on the Oc­cu­pa­tion­al Health and Safe­ty Au­thor­i­ty to move swift­ly to bring charges against Paria and the oth­er par­ties in­volved for breach­es of the OSH Act, as the two-year lim­i­ta­tion on lay­ing charges is fast ap­proach­ing.

He called on the Gov­ern­ment, par­tic­u­lar­ly At­tor­ney Gen­er­al Regi­nald Ar­mour and Labour Min­is­ter Stephen Mc Clashie to make the amend­ment rec­om­mend­ed by the com­mis­sion­ers to the OSH Act, as well as the labour move­ment’s pro­posed amend­ments that were sub­mit­ted over the years.

He al­so urged Gov­ern­ment to amend the law in or­der to im­ple­ment an­oth­er of the CoE’s rec­om­men­da­tions that “com­pul­so­ry reg­u­la­tion be in­tro­duced with a regime of fi­nan­cial penal­ties and crim­i­nal sanc­tions for com­pa­nies and in­di­vid­u­als fail­ing to ad­here to them.”

Con­tact­ed yes­ter­day how­ev­er, DPP Gas­pard said he could not “say much” on the mat­ter, as he still has to pe­ruse the doc­u­ments.

“I can’t say much yet. I have to read the doc­u­ments first. I in­tend to do so as soon as I can,” he said via a What­sApp mes­sage.


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