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Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Paria, LMCS officials deny 15 charges in diving tragedy

by

Derek Achong
264 days ago
20240912

Of­fi­cials of Paria Fu­el Trad­ing Com­pa­ny and Land and Ma­rine Con­tract­ing Ser­vices (LM­CS) have de­nied 15 charges un­der the Oc­cu­pa­tion­al Safe­ty and Health (OSH) Act, re­lat­ed to an in­ci­dent in 2022 which claimed the lives of four LM­CS divers.

Paria gen­er­al man­ag­er Mush­taq Mo­hammed, its ter­mi­nal op­er­a­tions man­ag­er Collin Piper and LM­CS di­rec­tor Kaz­im Ali Snr plead­ed not guilty to the charges as they made their sec­ond court ap­pear­ance be­fore Se­nior Mag­is­trate Ali­cia Chankar yes­ter­day.

Mag­is­trate Chankar read the set of charges that were brought against the trio and two com­pa­nies by the Oc­cu­pa­tion­al Safe­ty and Health Au­thor­i­ty and Agency (OS­HA), through its Chief In­spec­tor Franz Bris­bane, ear­li­er this year.

Mo­hammed, who is fac­ing four charges, is ac­cused of fa­cil­i­tat­ing a breach of the OSH Act by fail­ing to pre­pare an emer­gency plan based on a risk as­sess­ment and by fail­ing to en­sure work­ers, in­clud­ing the four de­ceased divers and their col­league who sur­vived, were not ex­posed to a safe­ty risk.

Mo­hammed was called up­on to en­ter pleas on be­half of the State-owned en­er­gy com­pa­ny, which is charged with four of­fences for fail­ing to en­sure the divers were not ex­posed to risk, for fail­ing to im­ple­ment an emer­gency plan based on a risk as­sess­ment, for fail­ing to re­vise an emer­gency plan through con­sul­ta­tion with work­er rep­re­sen­ta­tives and for fail­ing to con­duct an an­nu­al as­sess­ment of the po­ten­tial risks to em­ploy­ees of third- par­ty con­trac­tors such as the divers.

Piper is ac­cused of al­leged­ly fail­ing to en­sure em­ploy­ees of third-par­ty con­trac­tors were not ex­posed to health and safe­ty risks.

Ali, whose son was among the de­ceased divers, was slapped with three charges - ne­glect­ing to en­sure the health, safe­ty and wel­fare of his em­ploy­ees, for fail­ing to per­form an­nu­al risk as­sess­ments and for ne­glect­ing to pro­vide train­ing, in­struc­tions and su­per­vi­sion to en­sure the safe­ty of his work­ers.

His com­pa­ny was charged with fail­ing to per­form a risk as­sess­ment, for fail­ing to en­sure its work­ers’ safe­ty, and fail­ing to pro­vide them with prop­er train­ing and su­per­vi­sion.

Dur­ing the hear­ing, Gilbert Pe­ter­son, SC, ac­cused OS­HA of launch­ing a “dou­ble-bar­relled” at­tack on the par­ties, as he ques­tioned why sim­i­lar charges were filed be­fore the In­dus­tri­al Court. He sug­gest­ed that the case be­fore the mag­is­trate should not pro­ceed un­til the Privy Coun­cil weighs in on a land­mark case over the lay­ing of charges un­der the OSH Act.

In that case, a de­ci­sion by the Court of Ap­peal over the time lim­it for bring­ing charges un­der the leg­is­la­tion is be­ing chal­lenged. The Ap­peal Court ruled that health and safe­ty charges and crim­i­nal charges had to be filed six months af­ter the con­duct oc­curred, while civ­il claims can be brought with­in two years.

Pe­ter­son sug­gest­ed the out­come of the ap­peal would di­rect­ly af­fect the case against his clients.

“I can­not think of a greater abuse of process than this,” he said.

Pe­ter­son sug­gest­ed that OS­HA should not have wait­ed un­til the out­come of the Com­mis­sion of En­quiry in­to the div­ing tragedy be­fore it took ac­tion.

“The lim­i­ta­tion pe­ri­od is very alive,” Pe­ter­son said.

Re­spond­ing to the sub­mis­sions, OS­HA lawyer Pamela El­der, SC, dis­agreed over the po­ten­tial im­pact of the ap­peal. She said her client filed charges in both the In­dus­tri­al Court and San Fer­nan­do Mag­is­trates’ Court as it was seek­ing both “pun­ish­ment” and “com­pen­sa­tion” over the par­ties’ con­duct.

Pe­ter­son agreed for the charges in re­la­tion to Mo­hammed, Piper and Paria to be joined. LM­CS and Ali’s lawyer Di­nesh Ram­bal­ly agreed for the same to be done for his clients. There was no agree­ment on join­ing all 15 charges against the group.

Pe­ter­son and Ram­bal­ly called on OS­HA to dis­close its ev­i­dence be­fore they de­cide the is­sue which will af­fect whether the ac­cused are even­tu­al­ly tried to­geth­er.

“LM­CS is seek­ing jus­tice as well. Jus­tice is due process. If you want jus­tice, what could be wrong in shar­ing the in­for­ma­tion?” Ram­bal­ly said.

Ram­bal­ly al­so sug­gest­ed that dis­clo­sure would as­sist with his clients’ de­fence. He point­ed to sec­tion 89 of the leg­is­la­tion, which al­lows a per­son or en­ti­ty fac­ing charges to iden­ti­fy who they be­lieve is the ac­tu­al of­fend­er.

“From day one, we in­di­cat­ed, if you are the re­cip­i­ent of a com­plaint, you can make a com­plaint against whom you be­lieve is the ac­tu­al of­fend­er,” Ram­bal­ly said.

“This is not a case where we are co-de­fen­dants and share a com­mon in­ter­est.”

Ram­bal­ly claimed he wrote OS­HA to in­voke the sec­tion but did not re­ceive a re­sponse. He al­so agreed with Pe­ter­son on the po­ten­tial ef­fect of the pend­ing Privy Coun­cil ap­peal.

On Feb­ru­ary 25, 2022, LM­CS divers Christo­pher Boodram, Fyzal Kur­ban, Rishi Na­gas­sar, Yusuf Hen­ry and Kaz­im Ali Jr were sucked in­to the 30-inch di­am­e­ter pipeline they were per­form­ing main­te­nance work at Paria’s Pointe-a-Pierre fa­cil­i­ty. All were se­ri­ous­ly in­jured but Boodram man­aged to make his way to the en­trance of the pipeline and was res­cued.

LM­CS of­fi­cials were blocked from at­tempt­ing to res­cue their col­leagues. Three of the divers’ bod­ies were re­cov­ered on Feb­ru­ary 28, while Na­gas­sar’s was re­cov­ered the fol­low­ing day.

Cab­i­net ini­tial­ly ap­point­ed a five-mem­ber team to in­ves­ti­gate the in­ci­dent but even­tu­al­ly called a Com­mis­sion of En­quiry due to pub­lic crit­i­cism.

In its re­port, the com­mis­sion, chaired by King’s Coun­sel Jerome Lynch, pre­sent­ed sev­er­al dozen rec­om­men­da­tions, in­clud­ing charges un­der the OSH Act.

The com­mis­sion al­so rec­om­mend­ed that Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tions (DPP) Roger Gas­pard, SC, con­sid­er pros­e­cut­ing Paria for gross neg­li­gence manslaugh­ter.

In Ju­ly, DPP Gas­pard wrote to Po­lice Com­mis­sion­er Er­la Hare­wood-Christo­pher for the ini­ti­a­tion of an in­ves­ti­ga­tion to de­ter­mine whether there was suf­fi­cient ev­i­dence to pros­e­cute any per­son or en­ti­ty.

Around the same time, Paria is­sued a re­lease claim­ing LM­CS and the le­gal rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the vic­tims’ fam­i­lies were frus­trat­ing its at­tempts to set­tle com­pen­sa­tion claims.

At­tor­ney Prakash Ra­mad­har, who is rep­re­sent­ing the Kur­ban and Hen­ry fam­i­lies, de­nied the claims as he called on Paria to pay each of the men’s fam­i­lies $5 mil­lion in com­pen­sa­tion.

Last week, LM­CS’ le­gal team wrote to Ra­mad­har, who is rep­re­sent­ing Nag­gasar’s fam­i­ly and Boodram, sug­gest­ing that they should di­rect their le­gal ac­tion to Paria.

LM­CS’ lawyers dis­missed any im­pu­ta­tion of cul­pa­bil­i­ty at­tached to it by the com­mis­sion and claimed Paria should be held sole­ly li­able for what tran­spired. They sug­gest­ed that even if their clients were par­tial­ly re­spon­si­ble for the ini­tial ac­ci­dent as al­leged, Paria’s han­dling of the re­sponse ab­solved it.

LM­CS did ad­mit they owe their work­ers’ fam­i­lies and Boodram com­pen­sa­tion un­der the Work­men’s Com­pen­sa­tion Act but claimed pay­ments could not be made un­til its claim to its in­sur­er is de­ter­mined. The com­pa­ny claimed it pur­sued lit­i­ga­tion over the is­sue, af­ter it made a claim short­ly af­ter the in­ci­dent but did not re­ceive a re­sponse.


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