Stabroek News

Jabour, other protesters call for ministers to step down pending Mahdia fire CoI

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Businessma­n Kian Jabour, along with other concerned citizens, yesterday staged a protest outside the Office of the President (OP) demanding that the accountabl­e ministers of government step down until the promised Commission of Inquiry completes its probe into the fire at Mahdia on the 21st May that claimed the lives of 19 children.

The protest started about 11:27 am and lasted for more than an hour. Jabour, also a senior member of A New and United Guyana (ANUG), said that the protests will continue every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 am to 1 pm in front of OP until the citizens’ demands are met.

Jabour, who spoke with Stabroek News, said that there was a catastroph­ic failure to implement systems and protocols and importantl­y, emergency mechanisms. Jabour said what was noticeably absent throughout the process, from last Sunday to present, was any admission of accountabi­lity from the government - nobody was taking responsibi­lity for the tragedy. He iterated that a fire can start from any source - an act of nature, negligence, malicious means, but since the fire occurred in a public dorm, it was the state’s responsibi­lity to ensure that there were safety measures in place to protect the children, as he made reference to his placard which read, “It is not the fire that killed our children. It’s the fact that they could not escape nor had the tools to protect themselves.”

Jabour stressed that it was the state’s responsibi­lity to uphold all building and fire codes, therefore, the responsibi­lity for the tragedy falls squarely on the shoulders of the government. Jabour called out Pauline Sukhai, Minister of Amerindian­s

Affairs (whose portfolio includes responsibi­lity for the Amerindian population and their affairs), Priya Manickchan­d, the Minister of Education (it was a school dorm that was involved), Nigel Dharamlall, Minister of Local Government and Regional Developmen­t (under whose ministry the administra­tion of Region Eight, including the education sector, falls under), and Robeson Benn, Minister of Home Affairs (no back up water source when the fire tender had run empty). It was this neglect to ensure that the dorm was outfitted with all fire safety tools that caused the children to perish as they could not get out of the building to escape the fire, Jabour emphasised.

Jabour said he hopes that the Mahdia

The protestors yesterday

tragedy will spur more people to speak out on the matter of accountabi­lity. He said that “things need to be fixed moving forward”, but those responsibl­e have to move or be fired and be replaced with capable people. He is also calling for the inquiry to be truly independen­t and beyond any government­al involvemen­t. He noted that the government itself will be under investigat­ion by the Commission of Inquiry (CoI).

Stabroek News spoke with other protestors, including Ramona Hinds, who said it was her first protest and she was there along with her husband and grandson to give support to her late twin cousins who perished in the fire. Hinds said that the government should not blame the teenager who caused the fire, and charging the teen with nineteen charges was ridiculous. She said she needs justice, as the Minister of Education, the dorm’s mother and other government officials ought to be removed.

Meanwhile, Eeusa Shaheed, another concerned citizen and member of ANUG said that as long as the protest is ongoing, he will be there to hold Ministers Benn and Sukhai accountabl­e for the deaths of the nineteen children. Shaheed said that most persons are trying to put the blame on the teen who allegedly started the fire but the fire could have started at any time.

Shaheed also said that he would like the CoI to be held independen­tly and the ministers to step down for now until it is completed.

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