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Trinidad judge rules banning open-air cremations during COVID-19 were unconstitu­tional

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(Trinidad Guardian) A short-lived policy banning open-air cremations for COVID-19 victims during the pandemic has been deemed unconstitu­tional.

High Court Judge Avason Quinlan-Williams issued the declaratio­n when she upheld a constituti­onal lawsuit brought by Cindy-Ann Ramsaroop-Persad in late July, last year. However, Justice Quinlan-Williams only yesterday issued a written judgment, in which she detailed the reasons for her previous decision.

The case was filed by Ramsaroop-Persad in August 2021 after her father, Silochan Ramsaroop, passed away five days after being admitted to the Couva Medical and Multi-Training Facility, two months earlier.

Ramsaroop-Persad’s brother applied at the Chaguanas Police Station for a permit for their father to be cremated at the Waterloo Cremation Site and it was granted.

However, hours later, a police officer contacted the family and claimed that the permit was revoked as it was issued in error because of the ongoing prohibitio­n against open-air pyre cremations for COVID-19 victims.

As part of the lawsuit, Ramsaroop-Persad’s legal team relied on the evidence of several internatio­nal medical experts including epidemiolo­gist Dr Farley Cleghorn, who claimed that the policy was unnecessar­y.

They also claim that the policy was not supported by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) or the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose advice the ministry and by extension the Government has been relying on during the ongoing pandemic.

In response to the lawsuit, the State has relied on the evidence of Chief Medical Officer Dr Roshan Parasram, who claimed that an average pyre does not completely destroy a human body and that the eruption of bodily fluids from corpses presents “an uncertain risk” to mourners at an open-air cremation.

The Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha (SDMS) also filed a similar lawsuit as the policy mainly affected Hindu citizens. However, it withdrew its case in January 2022, after the policy was abandoned following a meeting with then attorney general Faris Al-Rawi.

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