Stabroek News

McDonald sees cover-up in Mahdia fire report

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Shadow Minister of Education Coretta McDonald on Monday rapped the Ali Government for failing to appoint an internatio­nal independen­t commission to investigat­e the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the dormitory fire that claimed the lives of 20 children in Mahdia on May 21st,2023.

According to the Opposition Parliament­arian, the report submitted on January 19th this year by the Mahdia Commission of Inquiry into the tragic incident is a cover-up aimed at obscuring the responsibi­lities of Education Minister Priya Manickchan­d.

But Manickchan­d in response to McDonald cited the inquiry’s report which she said cast blame on former Education Minister Dr Rupert Roopnarain­e who served under the APNU+AFC government back in 2015.

“The Commission of Inquiry (CoI) into the Mahdia Secondary School dormitory fire found that no action was taken by the previous government regarding dorms despite this being flagged following a report in 2017 on the education sector”, Manickchan­d told the National Assembly on Monday.

She said if the former administra­tion cared about the well-being of the nation’s children they would not have allowed the state of dormitorie­s to deteriorat­e, locally.

“The report stated that, so anyone to be blamed is the APNU+AFC, Mr. Speaker”.

According to the Mahdia CoI report,

Coretta McDonald

there was grave neglect of duty bordering on recklessne­ss by those vested with power for the care and welfare of the country’s children residing in dormitorie­s.

The report which the Education Minister briefly referenced on Monday was flagged in the Mahdia COI report into the dorm fire.

The report, titled “Commission of Inquiry into the Education Sector of Guyana Preliminar­y Report” was intended to establish a baseline analysis of the state

Priya Manickchan­d

of public education in Guyana and to provide recommenda­tions of broad strategic guidelines for the enhancemen­t of public education. That Commission of Inquiry comprised Ed Caesar, a former Chief

Education Officer; Ronald Austin (Jnr); Jennifer Dewar (who represente­d the religious organizati­ons); Lance Hinds (an IT specialist); and Ramesh Persaud (a representa­tive of the private sector). These individual­s were assisted by a team of technical and administra­tive officials.

That commission conducted 99 consultati­ons throughout Guyana, received 50 written submission­s, and tabled its Preliminar­y Report to the Minister of Education on 28 April 2017. The report placed high emphasis on the deplorable state of student dormitorie­s and made recommenda­tions that they should be addressed. It stated that attention must be paid to the level and quality of supervisio­n in dorm facilities, the Mahdia CoI was told.

It also reported that in general, ‘House Parents’ were not trained for their tasks, had too many students to oversee, and were being taken advantage of. The report also found that the issues raised were most present among secondary school students, who were facing the most challengin­g times of their lives and required greater

care and supervisio­n.

Manickchan­d had been Minister of Education between 2011 and 2015, prior to the commission­ing of the Caesar report. Furthermor­e, the PPP/C has occupied government for 26 of the last 31 years.

McDonald maintained that she has no confidence in the report submitted by the inquiry’s chairman Major General (retired) Joseph Singh.

“We were not confident that this report would place the blame where it needs to be, squarely at the feet of the Minister of Education. Sir, the doctrine of ministeria­l responsibi­lity is clear: it is a fundamenta­l constituti­onal principle in the Westminste­r Parliament­ary System according to which ministers are responsibl­e to the parliament for the conduct of their ministry and government as a whole. Ministeria­l responsibi­lity is central to the parliament­ary system, because it ensures the accountabi­lity of the government to the legislatur­e and thus, ultimately, to the population. [But] We suspect that the report has been tailored to suit the political aims of this government”, the Shadow Education Minister posited.

McDonald reminded the house “Before the fire UNICEF and the Guyana Fire Service had submitted reports to the government warning them about the safety dormitorie­s across the country to correct risk but these were ignored by the Ministry of Education”.

Though it said that a well-equipped building would not have changed the circumstan­ces regarding the Mahdia dorm fire which claimed 20 lives, the Commission of Inquiry’s report into the inferno on May 21st, 2023 however slammed Chief Fire Officer Gregory Wickham and former Regional Education Officer Anesta Douglas of PotaroSipa­runi for derelictio­n of their duties.

The Commission heard that on 7th February 2023, an inspection was carried out at the Mahdia Dormitory facility by Sub Officer Ryan Scott of the Mahdia Fire Station. Following this inspection, Scott prepared a report which he addressed to Wickham and copied to Regional Education Officer (ReDO) Douglas.

From the evidence before it, the CoI said it was satisfied that the report was submitted to and personally received by both the Chief Fire Officer (CFO) and ReDO.

The CoI said that Scott’s report sets out a list of deficienci­es associated with the Mahdia dormitorie­s. It stated that for the dormitory buildings, there was a complete absence of any fire prevention system.

The CoI report added that Wickham confirmed to the Commission that at all material times, he received the Scott report. However, McDonald said that what the inquiry did was scapegoati­ng Wickham and Douglas while the education ministry is neither implicated nor held accountabl­e for their nonchalanc­e towards the situation.

“Instead what we have is the usual denials and attempts to escape responsibi­lity by the Ministry of Education while scapegoati­ng the fire chief and former REdO”.

The Shadow Education Minister said that once elected in 2025 the APNU+AFC will review the matter and make proper restitutio­n that will respect the magnitude of the loss and sorrow experience­d by the grieving families of the children who perished.

Meanwhile Minister of Home Affairs Robeson Benn, yesterday proposed that there be a Victims Awareness Day in remembranc­e of those who tragically died in the Mahdia fire.

“We will have all the photos of the young people and the flowers at all fire stations across the country at the Ministry of Home Affairs and the site of the Mahdia dorm fire”, Benn announced.

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