WEDNESDAY i’m lovin’ it!
HIGH 78ºF LOW 68ºF Volume: 113 No.34
The Tribune The Established 1903
T H E P E O P L E ’ S PA P E R
Being Bound To Swear To The Dogmas Of No Master
JANUARY 11, 2017
Biggest And Best!
A tale of two marches
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THE SCENE on Bay Street at yesterday’s We March Bahamas protest march. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
‘Enough is enough’ says leader of We March protest By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net POINTING to the hundreds of protestors that flooded Bay Street chanting “enough is enough”, We March Bahamas lead organiser Ranard Henfield yesterday forecast that the movement was poised to “take over the government” at the election polls later this year. Mr Henfield praised the event’s turnout, which he claimed was three times the size of the group’s Black Friday march in November, as a sign that “the people have found their voice”. He pledged that the group was working on compiling information gathered through focus groups into “the people’s manifesto”, an election campaign tool that supporters can use to educate candidates vying for their vote. We March intends to
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print and distribute 150,000 copies of the brochure at its next march, according to Mr Henfield, who said that organisers will not announce its date until they apply for Cabinet approval next week. “I think it’s three times the numbers we had on Black Friday,” he said. “I was expecting the numbers to triple and we saw that today. It shows you that the movement is growing, more people are prepared to stand up, more people are prepared to offer solutions and not cower to an administration that is trying to shut us down or muzzle us. SEE PAGE THREE
THE CROWD marching yesterday to mark the 50th anniversary of Majority Rule.
Photo: Terrel W. Carey/Tribune Staff
PM: MAJORITY RULE WAS FOR ALL BAHAMIANS By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net MORE than 1,000 people marched in solidarity with the governing Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) yesterday morning, com-
memorating the 50th anniversary of a day Prime Minister Perry Christie described as “one of the most significant in the history of The Bahamas”. Dressed in colours representing the national flag, the participants marched for
nearly three hours, singing gospel songs and the National Anthem, from Windsor Park to Bay Street and finally to the Southern Recreation Grounds for a ceremony. Despite fears that the governing party’s march and the We March pro-
test would meet along the planned route, the Majority Rule Day march went on uninterrupted. Police did not give an estimate of the crowd size when asked by The Tribune. SEE PAGE SEVEN
‘BLACK PEOPLE BREED TOO MUCH’ SAYS ANGLICAN ARCHDEACON By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net ANGLICAN Archdeacon James Palacious yesterday said “black people breed too much”, adding that Bahamian women “should stop having babies” they cannot afford. Addressing a crowd of supporters at the end of a march to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Majority
Rule on the Southern Recreation Grounds, Archdeacon Palacious said unless “we find a way to control our reproductive processes” The Bahamas will be stuck recycling poverty. The archdeacon said while Montagu MP Richard Lightbourn’s proposal for state-sponsored sterilisation of women was “most unfortunate,” he agrees with the principle of what Mr Lightbourn was trying
to say. While speaking at the Free National Movement’s (FNM) televised convention last July, Mr Lightbourn proposed that the country adopt legislation that mandates unwed mothers with more than two children have their “tubes tied” in an effort to curtail the country’s social ills. His comments drew the ire of many people, with some parliamentarians, local advocacy groups, and others swiftly condemning him for his statements. He has since apologised for his comments. “We live in a society where the rich gets richer and the poor get children,”
ARCHDEACON James Palacious addresses supporters at the Majority Rule gospel concert, saying “We live in a society where the rich gets richer and the poor get children”. Photo: Terrel W Carey/Tribune Staff Archdeacon Palacious said on Tuesday. “What I mean is this, unless we can control our re-
productive process we will always be recycling poverty. My member of Parliament Richard Lightbourn
made some most unfortunate remarks at the FNM convention, which he later apologised for, and that is important. Having said that let me say this too: the principal of what he was trying to say I agree totally. “Black people breed too much. We have too many children we cannot afford and as a result of that we digging ourselves more and more into poverty. If we can’t see that then something is radically wrong with us. “You have children on the lunch programme right now mothers, and you going having some more, come SEE PAGE SEVEN
22-YEAR-OLD MAN GUNNED DOWN YARDS FROM A CHURCH BY SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net
POLICE are investigating two more homicides, a shooting death of a 22-yearold man that occurred near a church late on Monday
night and the circumstances surrounding the death of a man who died in hospital on Tuesday after being shot along with three others on New Year’s Eve. Monday’s killing took place in the Blue Hill Heights area and brought
the country’s murder count to five for the year, according to The Tribune’s records. Last night, police also said that a man who was shot in the area of Sandilands Village Road late on December 31, died in hos-
pital on Tuesday. His death would push the 2016 homicide count to 114, according to The Tribune’s records. Another man who was also shot at the time died on the scene. SEE PAGE SIX