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Another Worker Dies on the Job as Industrial Death Toll Mounts

Admin by Admin
July 12, 2026
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A 25-year-old Cuban construction worker was killed on Friday, July 10, after being struck in the head by a high-pressure hose while working at a construction site in Providence, East Bank Demerara, marking the latest in a series of fatal workplace accidents that continue to raise concerns about occupational safety in Guyana.

Dead is Yuviosomar Galindo Cardona. According to the Guyana Police Force, the incident occurred at approximately 9:45 a.m.

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Police said preliminary investigations indicate that Cardona was operating a high-pressure hose connected to a cement machine during construction works when he reportedly lost control of the equipment.

“The deceased was operating a high-pressure hose attached to a cement machine during construction works when he reportedly lost control of the hose, which swung and struck him to the head,” the police said.

The injured worker was rushed to the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

His body has since been taken to a funeral home, where it is awaiting a post-mortem examination.

Police have not identified the construction company where the accident occurred, and it was not immediately clear whether the Ministry of Labour’s Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Department has launched an investigation into the fatal incident.

The death comes amid continuing concerns over workplace safety in Guyana, particularly in the construction and mining sectors, which have recorded a disproportionate number of industrial fatalities during the country’s rapid oil-fuelled economic expansion.

Earlier this year, Minister of Labour and Manpower Planning Keoma Griffith disclosed that 13 workers were killed and 64 others injured in workplace accidents between January and April 2026, describing the figures as “troubling” and pledging stricter enforcement of occupational safety and health standards. The minister said most of the fatalities occurred in the mining and construction industries.

The Ministry of Labour has since said it intends to intensify workplace inspections, strengthen enforcement and expand the capacity of its Occupational Safety and Health Department as construction activity continues to accelerate across the country.

Workplace deaths have remained a persistent challenge despite repeated calls for greater compliance with safety regulations. Construction workers, miners and heavy equipment operators continue to account for a significant share of fatal industrial accidents, prompting trade unions and safety advocates to press for stronger oversight, improved training and stricter adherence to occupational safety protocols.

Friday’s fatality is expected to come under close scrutiny as investigators determine whether established occupational safety procedures were followed and whether adequate safeguards were in place. Workplace safety advocates have long maintained that industrial accidents are rarely random events; they are often the result of preventable failures in training, supervision, equipment, maintenance or compliance with safety standards. The findings of the investigation will therefore be critical in determining whether this tragedy was an unavoidable mishap or one that could—and should—have been prevented.

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