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FRIDAY i’m lovin’ it!

HIGH 78ºF LOW 65ºF Volume: 113 No.41

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 20, 2017

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art books design film fashion mu Friday, Janua sic entert ry 20, 2017 ainment foo d puzzles

Weekend

Waterfront dining

Inside Weekend CLASSIFIEDS TRADER: CARS, CARS, CARS, CARS

belles oF the ball Pages 14&15

Seafood an d spice The Pier

Waterfront dining at

Students flee in stabbing terror

Food, page 8&9

PLP UNVEILS 16 MORE CANDIDATES FOR ELECTION

By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net PRIME Minister Perry Christie yesterday urged supporters to ramp up voter registration efforts as the path will be clear towards the next general elections once the party emerges from its national convention next week. Mr Christie addressed scores of supporters on the grounds of the party’s headquarters, filled to capacity for the ratification of 16 candidates – the majority of whom were senior incumbent MPs, including himself. The candidates ratified last night all pledged to uphold the party’s commitment to economic SEE PAGE TWO

BAHA MAR DOCUMENTS ‘TO BE UNSEALED BEFORE OPENING’ DISTRESSED and angry parents outside the entrance to Government High School yesterday, where three male students were stabbed, one of which is in critical condition. Photos: Terrel W. Carey/Tribune Staff

Teenage boy in critical condition, two others hurt BY SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net A TEENAGE boy is in critical condition in hospital after he was stabbed multiple times during a brawl at Government High School yesterday morning which left two other students injured. The fight took place shortly after 11am on the school’s Yellow Elder Gardens campus. The three teens were injured during the argument between dozens of children during the schools first recess. Two of the boys are listed in stable condition while police said the other victim was critically injured. The school was immediately put on lock down

while police processed the crime scene and spoke to witnesses. Angry parents shouted outside the school’s main gate yesterday as they waited for the students to be released, with many in fear that one of their relatives had been injured. In a 30-second video, taken during the fight and posted on social media, several students appear to be hitting and punching each other. One young man is seen on video with what appears to be a knife in his hand, running towards the fight. Assistant Commissioner of Police Stephen Dean said two young men, students of GHS, are in police custody assisting police with their investigation. ACP Dean

said it is “unfortunate” that the incident occurred on the school’s campus. He said there was a school policing officer at the school at the time of the brawl but because of the size of the compound and the “large student population” it is a difficult school to police. “Shorty after 11, the school was on break when there was an altercation between a group of students that led to one student being stabbed and two others being injured,” ACP Dean told reporters at the school. “Three were taken to hospital, one is in critical condition the other two are stable. “We are in the early stage of our investigation. We SEE PAGE THREE

A CONCERNED parent who said her son called her saying “Mommy, they trying to stab me”. She wanted to see her son and know that he was unhurt.

PM: FEAR OF CRIME REMAINS HIGH DESPITE PROGRESS BY POLICE FORCE By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net

PRIME Minister Perry Christie struck a sombre tone yesterday as he acknowledged that criminality and the fear of crime significantly impacted the quality of life and decisionmaking of many Bahamians despite the significant progress recorded by law

enforcement and the justice system. Mr Christie contemplated the evolution of the laws in a contemporary Bahamas within the possible context of killings of persons on bail, and jurists, and stressed that the country could not rely on the fear of punishment to keep communities safe as officials marked the opening of the Office of the Public Defender.

The independent institution will provide full time representation for accused persons that are unable to secure legal representation, and features video-conferencing technology that will allow defenders to hold private counsel with clients remanded at the Bahamas Department of Correction Services. SEE PAGE FIVE

RUUD ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS

By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net THE release of the sealed Supreme Court Baha Mar documents is “most definitely” expected before the opening of the $3.5bn West Bay Street mega resort, Attorney General Allyson Maynard-Gibson said yesterday. While pinning the government down to a time frame of the document’s release, Mrs MaynardGibson said she is currently in the process of being advised by attorneys in her office on how best to implement Prime Minister Perry Christie’s directive to have the Baha Mar heads of agreement released for public consumption, while protecting proprietary information. SEE PAGE SIX

‘SCHIZOPHRENIC’ WHO KILLED FATHER JAILED FOR 15 YEARS By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net

A JUDGE imposed a 15year sentence yesterday on a “paranoid schizophrenic” woman who fatally stabbed her father a year ago. Justice Carolita Bethell had been asked by the Crown to consider that 24-year-old Antonia Butler remained a danger to society given that her victim, Anthony Butler, was unarmed and the attack on January 9, 2016 was unexpected. SEE PAGE SIX


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