01292021 NEWS AND SPORT

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Volume: 118 No.45, JANUARY 28, 2021

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NATIONAL EXAMS HEAD FOR DELAY

By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net

EDUCATION Minister Jeff Lloyd said yesterday it is likely this year’s national examinations will be held later than usual as a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Speaking to reporters, the minister said education officials continue to be engaged in discussions with Cambridge evaluators and assessors to finalise the dates for the examinations. This comes after the 2020 GLAT, BJC and BGCSE exams were postponed several times last year in response to the pandemic that resulted in the

closure of schools across the country. Given the late commencements of the 2020 exams among other things, Mr Lloyd said it is only “natural” that officials give some consideration to pushing back the tests for this year. He said a final decision will be made soon, at which point the public will then be informed. “I expect within a week or so that there would be a definitive statement by the Ministry of Education as to the firm dates for the conduct of the BJC and the BGCSE exams and the GLAT,” Mr Lloyd said. SEE PAGE THREE

THE Government has already started discussing potential income tax reforms, the IMF revealed yesterday, although it has admitted any changes will take “years” for The Bahamas to implement. The International Monetary Fund (IMF), in its full Article IV report on The Bahamas for 2020, again sought to nudge The Bahamas towards more progressive and “equitable” taxation options such as an individual and/or corporate income tax.

And it disclosed that the Government, in response to its findings, had confirmed that internal talks are already underway to explore the feasibility of an income tax system in The Bahamas. These revelations came as the Minnis administration voiced optimism it could achieve $300m in extra revenues and spending cuts if required - an increase upon the $200m it is targeting. “The authorities reiterated their commitment to fiscal discipline once the crisis subsides,” the IMF report said. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

ANOTHER round of employee furloughs and the Minnis administration’s extension of special emergency powers are pushing Atlantis employees like Areba Bridgewater to the brink. Employers would normally be required to give workers like her a redundancy package after 12 weeks of not paying them a salary. SEE PAGE THREE

MPS IN HOUSE GET READY TO RUMBLE

SEE PAGE EIGHT

GOVT TELLS IMF INCOME TAX REFORMS IN REVIEW By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

‘HOW LONG MUST WE HOLD ON?’

AG CONCEDES JULY OPENING ‘COST US DEAR’ By KHRISNA RUSSELL Tribune Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net

BODY IN THE BUSH A MAN was found dead yesterday on a track road off Graham Drive in Yellow Elder Gardens with apparent gunshot wounds. It is suspected the body had been there for about 12 hours. See page two for the full story. Photo: Donovan McIntosh/Tribune Staff

ATTORNEY General Carl Bethel insisted the government will not be caught with its guard down again, telling the Senate yesterday officials are now in a “critical” race against time to have all the population vaccinated. During debate on the extension of emergency orders in the Senate yesterday, Mr Bethel admitted that last July the country let its guard down, an error that “we paid dearly for”. SEE PAGE FOUR

FINLAYSONS LOSE $2M DEBT BATTLE By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

THE Finlayson family yesterday lost its bid to overturn a Supreme Court order compelling the sale of a downtown Bay Street property to settle a near$2.2m tax debt owed to the Government. The Court of Appeal refused to grant the former Commonwealth Brewery/ Burns House owners extra

GARET ‘TIGER’ FINLAYSON time to appeal Justice Indra Charles’ order despite their arguments another judge had granted a blanket

“injunction” against the Treasurer and attorney general to stop the Government selling or interfering with any of their property assets. That injunction, granted by Justice Keith Thompson in a separate action brought by the Finlayson family’s General Bahamian Companies entity, involved a claim for unpaid rent said to be owed by the Government for another property. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

OUT OF THE PANDEMIC, A NEW WAY TO TALK SEE PAGE NINE


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