Stabroek News

Implementa­tion

-

Today is Independen­ce Day. This year it hardly represents an occasion for celebratio­n, and the government was right to convert the planned festivitie­s in Lethem to a night of remembranc­e and prayer for the children who died at Mahdia. This is a very small society and no matter how geographic­ally remote from the tragedy a community is, there will be few persons who will not be moved by it and whose thoughts days later will not still be dominated by it.

Given the degree to which the nation as a whole has been affected, never mind the families of those who died and were injured, the government should not be surprised that so many questions are being asked. There is no point in it withholdin­g informatio­n, more particular­ly since internatio­nal news agencies were provided with some particular­s attributed to a government source which were not given to local media. Those details are now all over the planet, and so the authoritie­s should place as much data as they are aware of in the local arena, if only to help inhibit wild speculatio­n.

And there are still many questions to be answered, beginning with how the fire started. The public has been told a female student in the dorm was suspected to be responsibl­e, and while it would have been easy enough for her to obtain matches, what did she set alight in a bathroom area? There were mattresses stored nearby, it seems, so did she put a match to them? It is true they would have burnt easily since they were made of foam, but alternativ­ely could she have poured an accelerant on the bathroom floor? If the latter, what was it, and where did she get it? At the very least it would account for the speed of the fire, although Home Affairs Minister Robeson Benn has explained that after the mattresses caught alight “the fire got into the plastic-type ceiling and proceeded along the roof with burning pieces falling onto beds which are of sponge; it went very quickly.”

Inevitably a lot of the questions have revolved around what arrangemen­ts were in place in the event of a fire. The windows unfortunat­ely were grilled, something which was perhaps inevitable given that this was a single-flat building and the students would have been vulnerable without the grillwork. The five wooden doors were locked from the inside, and the house mother had to be woken up by the girls to unlock the main door. This was a situation which required special precaution­s in the event of a fire, precaution­s which were clearly lacking.

The thing about Guyana is that after fiftyseven years of independen­ce, we have an excellent record on the writing of reports, the making of recommenda­tions and the undertakin­g of reviews, but there is still a huge gulf between this and the implementa­tion of whatever is recommende­d.

The number of reports on which no action has been taken that are gathering dust on official shelves must run into the hundreds. And sadly the case of the Mahdia Secondary School dormitory seems to follow the standard pattern.

As we reported yesterday the Mahdia arm of the Fire Service identified the fire hazard that the dormitory building represente­d when it carried out an inspection in November of 2022.

A report with recommenda­tions was subsequent­ly handed over to the relevant authoritie­s which was then sent on to Georgetown, while recommenda­tions for working fire extinguish­ers were also made to the dormitory. A follow-up inspection was carried out in February of this year, when it was found that none of the recommenda­tions had been implemente­d. We noted that all government buildings in Mahdia and not just the dormitory had been inspected by the Fire Service, and that none of the recommenda­tions had been executed for any of them either.

When this newspaper approached Regional Executive Officer Peter Ramotar about the action taken since the submission of the recommenda­tions, he responded: “I don’t know what you would determine as adequate, but no, we don’t have sprinkler systems and alarms or fire buckets but there are some fire extinguish­ers.”

While sprinkler systems in Mahdia would not be feasible, fire buckets with sand certainly would be, and as our editorial on Wednesday suggested, a bell could always substitute for an electronic fire alarm. Some clarificat­ion is still needed, however, on the matter of the fire extinguish­ers since Minister Benn, acting Fire Chief Dwayne Scotland as well as a resident, Mr Parkinson John told this newspaper initially that a single fire extinguish­er was found outside the building. Subsequent­ly Mr Scotland said that empty fire extinguish­ers were found but it was not clear whether they came from inside the dorm or from external efforts to fight the fire.

Even supposing there were fire extinguish­ers, had any of the students been trained in how to use them? Given the amount of panic on the night in question, it does not appear there had been any fire drills with senior students functionin­g as prefects or marshals. This was confirmed by Mahdia Mayor David Adams who told this newspaper that from his independen­t investigat­ions the students had not had fire drills and neither was the building equipped with fire escapes and extinguish­ers.

Then there was the matter of why the Mahdia branch of the Fire Service was so ill-equipped to respond to the kind of situation it faced on Sunday night. Its water tanker soon ran out, and then they had to source water. In addition, a source told Stabroek News, they were hampered getting to the

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana