Guyana government reaches settlement with parents in dormitory fire that killed 20 children

FILE - In this photo provided by Guyana's Department of Public Information, people walk past a girl鈥檚 dormitory that was engulfed by a nighttime fire, in Mahdia, Guyana, May 22, 2023. Guyana鈥檚 government says it will pay $25,000 to parents of each of the 20 children burned to death in the May 21 fire at the state-run high school. (Guyana's Department of Public Information via AP Photo, File)

GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) 鈥 Guyana鈥檚 government says it will pay $25,000 to parents of each of the 20 children burned to death in a fire at a state-run high school in May, as part of a settlement to avoid any further claims in the case.

The country鈥檚 main opposition party slammed the settlement in a statement Tuesday saying it provided too little money for the families and was aimed at avoiding obligations to address safety issues raised by the fire, at a boarding school for indigenous families in the town of Mahdia in Guyana鈥檚 interior.

The May 21 fire in a heavily fortified girl鈥檚 dormitory killed 19 female students and the son of a school administrator. Officials say one of the students deliberately set the fire, and she has been arrested and charged with murder.

Announcing the settlement late Monday, Attorney General Anil Nandlall said the families had requested the cash to 鈥渆nhance their ability to continue to provide for their families鈥 and that they all had signed agreements with the government.

The state also had taken care of all burial and related expenses back in May and June. One badly burned girl was sent to a New York hospital for specialized treatment.

The main opposition party, A Partnership For 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Unity, APNU, said in a statement that the settlement wasn鈥檛 sufficient because the money isn鈥檛 enough to build a house in the capital, much less in the interior where materials are more expensive to transport.

鈥淭hese students died whilst in the care and custody of the state and so the state has not been doing a favor to the families,鈥 opposition lawmaker and attorney Amanza Walton said in the statement.

Walton accused the government of trying to insulate itself from obligations to follow recommendations by United Nations International Children鈥檚 Emergency Fund, or UNICEF, to address safety issues at state-run dorms, including by changing the practice of placing iron grills on widows and padlocks on doors.

Meanwhile, the government is preparing to appoint a commission of inquiry into the tragedy in the coming weeks. Retired army chief of staff Maj. Gen Joseph Singh has been appointed to head the panel, but its other members have not yet been named.

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