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Friday, August 15, 2025

Judge rules banning open-air cremations during COVID-19 were unconstitutional

by

533 days ago
20240228
Justice Avason Quinlan-Williams

Justice Avason Quinlan-Williams

Se­nior Re­porter

derek.achong@guardian.co.tt

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.

In de­ter­min­ing the case, Jus­tice Quin­lan-Williams re­ject­ed claims from state at­tor­neys that the pol­i­cy was not an out­right ban, as it was con­tained in guide­lines to hos­pi­tal staff and fu­ner­al agen­cies and not in pub­lic health reg­u­la­tions that re­strict­ed cit­i­zens’ move­ments and abil­i­ty to gath­er.

“While a guide­line by its na­ture, or­di­nar­i­ly may not mean to have the force of law but ad­vise on how some­thing should be done the court dis­agrees that the Min­istry of Health’s guide­lines un­der con­sid­er­a­tion fall in­to that cat­e­go­ry,” she said.

“There is no al­ter­na­tive in­ter­pre­ta­tion for the phrase ‘will not be’, but as a pro­hi­bi­tion,” she added.

She not­ed that the se­nior po­lice of­fi­cer, who ini­tial­ly ap­proved the cre­ma­tion of Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad’s fa­ther, con­sid­ered the guide­lines when he re­versed his de­ci­sion.

“The fail­ure of the de­fen­dants to bring any po­lice of­fi­cer to demon­strate that of­fi­cers were will­ing to and/or was, in fact, is­su­ing open-air pyre cre­ma­tion per­mits de­spite the guide­lines caus­es the court to draw an ad­verse in­fer­ence,” she said.

She al­so not­ed that Paras­ram re­peat­ed­ly re­ferred to the pol­i­cy dur­ing press con­fer­ences.

“The CMO ac­tive­ly par­tic­i­pat­ed in bring­ing this in­for­ma­tion to the pub­lic what­ev­er his per­son­al views about the mean­ing of the guide­lines were,” she said.

While Jus­tice Quin­lan-Williams not­ed that the pol­i­cy would have been jus­ti­fi­able when the pan­dem­ic be­gan in 2020, she said it could not be af­ter Au­gust 2021 when Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad filed the case and pre­sent­ed ev­i­dence from med­ical ex­perts chal­leng­ing it.

“By then the re­stric­tion be­came de­creas­ing­ly con­nect­ed in a ra­tio­nal man­ner to curb­ing the spread of COVID-19, since there had been no con­firmed cas­es of trans­mis­sion from han­dling COVID-19 dece­dents,” she said.

“It was no longer nec­es­sary to ban open-air pyre cre­ma­tions. In­stead, guide­lines, this time, in the nor­mal mean­ing of the word, were re­quired as how open-air pyre cre­ma­tions were to be per­formed.”

The judge al­so not­ed that Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad’s ex­perts unan­i­mous­ly found that there was a high­er risk of mourn­er-to-mourn­er trans­mis­sion in a fu­ner­al home as op­posed to a cre­ma­tion site.

“The ex­perts de­bunked the ref­er­ences re­lied on by the CMO in sup­port of the ban to show that there was no re­al sci­en­tif­ic ba­sis to pre­vent open-air cre­ma­tions,” she said.

Jus­tice Quin­lan-Williams point­ed out that Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad and oth­ers who were sub­ject to the pol­i­cy were de­prived of an op­por­tu­ni­ty to per­form their re­li­gious du­ty and were forced to in­cur the costs of us­ing a cre­ma­to­ri­um which were dou­ble that of an open-air cre­ma­tion.

“This court finds that the pol­i­cy ban, af­ter Au­gust 2021, failed to strike any bal­ance at all, let alone a fair bal­ance be­tween the rights of the in­di­vid­ual and the in­ter­ests of the com­mu­ni­ty,” she said.

“There was no re­al risk as­so­ci­at­ed with con­duct­ing open-air pyre cre­ma­tions but the con­se­quences of re­strict­ing such was dire on the pub­lic, more so the Hin­du com­mu­ni­ty.”

While Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad was seek­ing com­pen­sa­tion as well as a de­c­la­ra­tion against the pol­i­cy, Jus­tice Quin­lan-Williams on­ly grant­ed the lat­ter.

“The court is sat­is­fied that the de­c­la­ra­tion made, is suf­fi­cient to meet the un­con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty found in this case and makes no fur­ther or­ders in re­la­tion to any re­liefs sought,” she said.

Ram­sa­roop-Per­sad was rep­re­sent­ed by Anand Ram­lo­gan, SC, Renu­ka Ramb­ha­jan, Jayan­ti Lutch­me­di­al, Vishaal Siewsaran, Jesse Ram­per­sad, Natasha Bis­ram and Cheyenne Lu­go.

The Min­is­ter of Health, Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice and the AG’s Of­fice were rep­re­sent­ed by Fyard Ho­sein, SC, Rishi Dass, SC, Te­nielle Ramkissoon, Ja­nine Joseph, Anis­sa Ali and Sarah Sinanan. 


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