ONE twin was born healthy while the other suffers from cerebral palsy. And as far as dad Brian Nurse of Valencia is concerned, the Sangre Grande Hospital is responsible for his son's illness. Nurse plans on having a daily lunch-time vigil in front of Minister John Rahael's Health Ministry Park Street office until he gets some satisfaction on the matter. Nurse is seeking answers from the minister as to why one baby is suffering from cerebral palsy. The distraught father said he had a meeting with Rahael who promised he would look into the matter. "Instead, I haven't gotten any concrete word from him. I am getting the runaround. "Right now, I have the matter in the hands of my lawyer," Nurse lamented. Nurse related that in 2002 he took his wife in labour to the Sangre Grande Hospital, where she was placed in a wheelchair and taken into a room. "About 15 minutes later the doctor came out and told me I had a beautiful baby boy, but the other one was breached. "I didn't know what he meant." Nurse recalled seeing a strange look on the doctor's face and knew all was not right. "My feeling was right. "The doctor then informed me that a Caesarean Section would have to be done to get the other baby, but there wasn't enough staff on hand to do it. "He did mention that it would take four persons to successfully do it." Nurse also recalled that the doctor said that medical personal from two other hospitals would have to be called in to perform the operation. "I requested that they take my wife to Mt. Hope. "They paid no attention to me. "A good time passed, then I was allowed to see my wife. "The other child was still in her stomach I could actually see the bulge on the far side of her belly. "She was in real pain. I asked anybody, everybody for help. I waited and waited. "The doctors never came," he said. Nurse further related that the first baby was delivered around 8.45 p.m. "It wasn't until almost 12 o' clock that I saw my second child in the arms of a nurse coming out the operation theatre. "When I saw him he didn't look good, he looked dazed," he said. The father of the child feels that the length of time it took to deliver the baby led to the condition which, he later learned, was cerebral palsy. "I am prepared to come here every lunch-time, until I get results. "I get frustrated every time I see my little Gerrard. "The other child, Jared, is doing fine."