– driver’s widow struggles to provide for children
More than five months after a bridge collapsed under a cement truck injuring him, Toolsie Persaud Limited (TPL) worker Imran Hassan is struggling to regain the full use of his legs following three operations.

Imran Hassan attempting a few steps at his home.
His colleague, the driver of the truck, Ramesh Ramrattan, was killed in the accident.
Hassan said his family is giving him their full support so that his life can be normal again, which is something he is fully bent on accomplishing. “I want to get back on my feet man …get my life back together,” Hassan said at his Eccles, East Bank Demerara home where he has been recuperating since November 4, when he was discharged from the Georgetown Public Hospital. Hassan had been in the hospital for several months and had undergone three operations, after he was hauled from beneath a TPL Ready Mix cement truck that toppled when the access bridge to New Providence collapsed.
Hassan sustained multiple burns on his legs from the blowtorch that was used to help extricate him from where he was pinned under the truck. His lower right leg around the ankle area was crushed and he also suffered bruised and pinched intestines. It had taken scores of volunteers almost two hours to get him from under the truck and many persons thought he would have died. But as he recounted to Stabroek News while he was in the hospital; God’s grace and his father’s voice assuring him that he would be alright gave him the strength to persevere through the ordeal.

Vidya Ramrattan and her daughters Anisa (right) and Kamini.
Hassan still has a way to go to full recovery, but he is confident and determined that he will get there. He was sitting on the sofa at home, watching a movie when this newspaper visited. His father Naseer Hassan, who was at home on his lunch break, sat nearby.
Hassan said he now spends many of his days in front of the television, which has become the centre point of his life. With his father at work and his sister going about her business he spends most of his time watching TV since he cannot move about much.

Ramesh Ramrattan
However, he still makes a commendable effort to get around on his own, given the damage to his legs. Walking is difficult and he tries to move about by the use of crutches or a walker but he cannot put too much pressure on his right leg. He also has a wheelchair which he uses to move about sometimes. Hassan still needs assistance to do some things for himself; such as taking a bath. But he now feeds himself, something he could not do a few months ago. And he tries to exercise his legs by lying on his back and moving them up and down, even trying a few steps.
Having to adjust from being fully active to only sitting or lying on a chair poses a mental challenge and Hassan is not afraid or ashamed to say that he wishes things could be different. And that is the reason why his immediate focus is on getting better. His therapy sessions started on Friday and he is already focused on channelling all his energies into walking upright again.
Rubbing the aches in his leg, which get worse when it rains, Hassan said that his doctor told him “everything is left up to me now…only me can help me self now.” And given the fact that he has gone through three successful surgeries–two skin grafts and one abdominal–and lost one of his toes, therapy is something he plans to overcome too.
Right knee
Most of his problems lie with his right knee. The blowtorch, which was used to help extricate him from under the truck, burned a huge hole behind his right knee. When that wound healed, it pulled the skin of his leg up, making it appear as though his right leg is shorter than the left. Also, the right shin and foot were smashed and badly burned and after the skin grafts his leg had to be left with the knee bent in order to heal properly. The therapy will also serve to strengthen both legs which have not been in use for a long time.
It won’t be as it was before, but both Hassan and his father are prepared to live with that. Even after therapy he will have a limp and the deep scars on his legs are going to remain forever, but as his father put it, “even if he was cripple,” and he had to do everything for him, “I just glad he alive.”
Hassan is grateful to his father and sister, who try their utmost to make his life as pleasant as possible. During the Christmas holidays, Naseer Hassan took his son to visit his friends. And every now and again he would take him to the shop at the end of the road to play a few games of dominoes and chat with the boys–little things that would take the monotony out of his days.
It is a bit difficult for them to cope with only the older Hassan working, and they are grateful for the help they received from TPL which paid Hassan’s salary every month since his accident. Up to yesterday, however, he was yet to receive money for the month of December even though he and his father made visits to the company.
Hassan said they were told that they need a paper from the doctor to prove that he still needs the money. He explained that he really does and will need it even more when his therapy starts as he will have to take a taxi to and from the Georgetown Hospital. In the meantime he is much better than his days in the hospital and has regained a few of the pounds he lost while he was hospitalized.
The injured young man said that his experience is a testimony to how fragile life is and “you gotta tek it more seriously.”
‘Very punishing life’
Meanwhile, for Vidya Ramrattan, widow of the truck driver who died on that fateful day life has changed.
She has resorted to taking a job as a domestic in order to support her three children, one of whom will write the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examinations in a few months. She said she received a lump sum from TPL and used it to buy her daughter a computer and do repairs on her relatives’ house in which she lives. The company also gave her wire mesh to build a fence around the house and paid the child’s CSEC examination fees.
The widow however was disappointed when the holidays came and went without so much as a “how you do” from the company for which her husband worked. While she is grateful for the help she received, Ramrattan said she felt the company should help a bit more, given that all of her children are at school; she is now the sole provider and domestic work is hardly available.
She said she also visited the Ministry of Human Ser-vices to see Minister Priya Manickchand on several occasions, but she was turned away. “They always say she not there or she busy,” Ramrattan told Stabroek News.
The woman said she was trying to access public assistance to help with her “very punishing life,” which she further describes as a step down from when her husband was alive.
She has had to sell a house lot her husband had acquired at the Diamond Housing Scheme since she could not afford to build a house and the land would have been seized if a structure was not put up within a certain period of time.
Ramrattan said she had asked TPL to build the house for her, but was advised to get a loan. She said this was not possible since she did not have a proper job and no assets to put up. In the meantime she lives in her relatives’ house and hopes that she can stay.
Anisa Dass, her elder daughter, has registered to write 10 CSEC subjects come May. She recently entered a beauty pageant at her school, Zenon Academy, and won the crown. She told Stabroek News that she is going to make her mother proud.
Kamini, the younger daughter, was having one of her happy days, playing “shark, shark” with other neighbourhood children. She took time out from the game to say how much she missed her dad. When asked what she remembered most, Kamini said that she missed the motor bike rides to go and buy ice cream. Her mother related that during the holidays Kamini cried most of the time. Ramrattan’s 17-year-old son was not at home when Stabroek News visited.
Ramrattan misses her husband dearly, evident in the huge framed picture of him that greets anyone who ventures up the short flight of steps. But life must go on and she must try to make it as easy as possible for her three children.




Better Compensation should be expected from these large companies that
should be held responsible when someone is injured or looses their lives.This is an area that needs attention. These poor people go on to live below the poverty line without resonable compensation. The children suffer without education, these companies need to help more.
The injured or surviving spouses and children should seek the advise of competent lawyers who will sue for a percentage of the settlement. This is 2009 , you must not be afraid to seek lawyers advise in situations like these.You dont have to find upfront money for lawyers.I bet you the companies will offer better settlement in cases like these.
These companies continue to grow and make millions of dollars PROFIT, while these people continue to suffer.The lawyers need to get busy , and go after these cases.What is the future of these children when accidents like these happen??
IMRAN as an Individual who is probably permanently disabled, and Visya as a mother with two young children, You ought to go to a high profile lawyer and ask them to represent you. You dont have to give them no money.They will probably ask for 33% of what ever they get ( or a little more for expenses depending what they have to do) . You will have a better chance of going on with your lives. On the other hand you try to work this out with the company, you will get a little help,pushed around, promises, and soon they will forget about you.
Dont let these company make you sign papers without your lawyer present.
And when you get any money dont spend it so fast, Some relatives will take you to the cleaners, and soon you will be WITHOUT.Be careful.
Think about the years ahead to raise those two children.
Owen, so true and very good advice. A lawyer would take her case for a commission. The thing is that sometimes the assests of the company are in different names and it is difficult to collect. They are getting the royal push around now. So sad.
PATT This is a big Company. TOOLSIE PERSAUD LIMITED.
A FAT CAT, they can do better for the injured and the widow with
two small children.See they start to push them around already.
Thanks for the support “Georgia on my Mind” ‘
You all get up and Get, go to a lawyer, You have nothing to loose.
Mr. Khan I totally agree with what you said in both of your blogs.
I think they need to sue the city also if I am not wrong because if that bridge was good, that accident would have never occured. I cannot believe that they told Mr. Hassan that they needed a paper from the doctor stating he needs the money still, that’s bull, he was employed with your company and the accident happened while he was on duty.
How the hell you expect him to live without having an income coming in ? I amso sorry for the pain and suffering that you are going through Mr. Hassan but thank Allah that you are still alive and remember that you are here for a reason only he knows. Vidya I am sorry for the way that you are being treated by the staff at the Human-Services trying to meet with the Minister. Priya Manichchand. I suggest that you stand there and tell them that you must see her and that you are not going to leave until you see her.Who the hell her staff thinks she is ? She has a job to do and she should do it with compassion for her fellow human being. Guyana Ministers have a bg problem regarding their positions and I think that is bad, because when they are kicked out of that position they have a lot to deal with down the road running into people who will or may what to do them something or will give them a few choice words.
Good luck Vidya and Hassan both of you get the same lawyer is possible and sue the company.
LIVE IN LOVE
PEACE OUT.
where are all these hot shot lawyers that represent these so called criminals and drug dealers. here is a chance to redeem yourselves. do something for humanity. remember the oath you took when you became a lawyer. you know who you are . how can you eat and sleep at night knowing what this family is going through.
tpl shame on you. where is your loyalty to your employees who do you think made your company successful . i guess you need the money more than that poor family. anyway . remember you have to become a human being first before you become anything else.
joe
joe