Commission into school fire that killed 20 finds series of failures

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Commission Into School Fire That Killed 20 Finds Series Of Failures
Guyana-Dormitory Fire
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By Bert Wilkinson, Associated Press

Am investigation by a government commission into a fire that killed 20 children at an Indigenous boarding school in Guyana found multiple errors and systematic failures.

Calling for reforms to avoid a repeat of the May 2023 fire, the report presented to President Irfaan Ali on Friday found there was a delay in seeking help and contacting the fire station.

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When help arrived, the commission found there were issues with crowd control and access to the dormitory located in the town of Mahdia, near the border with Brazil.

The report also noted there was a lack of water supply and found “inadequacies” in the fire service and firefighting equipment.

“These factors assisted with the speed of the conflagration,” said Brigadier General Joseph Singh, the retired army chief of staff who chaired the commission.

The report confirmed the fire was intentionally set by a 15-year-old student, who was later arrested and charged with multiple counts of murder. Nineteen students and the infant son of the dormitory manager died.

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At least 14 other students younger than 18 were rescued from the one-storey building.

Investigators found many of the dormitory’s windows had iron grills to keep out unwanted adult visitors and dorm officials were unable to find the keys to five doors that had no grills in time to save people.

The report cited “human failure” amid “chaotic and fiery circumstances.”

Police have explained grills were placed on windows to prevent some of the teenage girls from escaping at night and on weekends to socialise with miners who flash gold, diamonds and cash in attempts to groom girls.

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The commission contended that such culture needs to change given that the acts occur “with the tacit support of family members who benefit financially from such arrangements”.

President Ali echoed calls for a culture change among students and adults, noting that education officials and other authorities face “tremendous difficulties in the behavioral pattern and changes in many schools, and we now have to work and see how we incorporate a higher degree of discipline through a systemic intervention.”

Guyana’s government builds dormitory schools to house students from rural communities while their parents carry out daily chores such as hunting and farming.

Months after the fire, government officials said they would pay 25,000 dollars (£19,680) to the parents of each of the children who died in the fire as part of a settlement.

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