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VOLUME:117 No.52, FEBRUARY 6TH, 2020

OFFICIA

CLASSIFIED TRADER: CARS, CARS, CARS & MORE CARS

INSIDE

Norwegian admits dumping in ocean By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net THE government is clamping down on cruise ships operating in Bahamian waters, with Transport Minister Renward Wells declaring yesterday discharges at sea will not be tolerated. His statement came as he revealed officials recently learned of a discharge in Bahamian waters from a Norwegian Cruise Line vessel, however he did not provide specifics. This incident was voluntarily reported to the Bahamas Maritime Authority, he said. A spokesperson from BMA said by next week, the government will be in a better position to report on the specifics of Norwegian’s waste dumping. Last month, The Tribune reported that Carnival

Cruise Line had been caught polluting Bahamian waters yet again in 2019 after being found to have committed the infraction in 2017. Last year, Carnival Corporation reached a settlement with US federal prosecutors that would see it pay $20m in fines for violating terms of its probation in relation to its dumping. “Let me make one thing clear and in doing so emphatically state that we will defend our environmental sovereignty,” Mr Wells told the House of Assembly yesterday. “Those who have breached our environmental laws will be made to account. The pristine lands and waters of The Bahamas (are) the inheritance of our people. It belongs to all Bahamians, to all of you and to future generations of our beautiful nation.” SEE PAGE SEVEN

PEOPLE prescribed cannabis for medical purposes will have unlimited potential to grow plants to meet their needs if the Bahamas National Commission on Marijuana has its way. Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis tabled the commission’s report in the House of Assembly yesterday, bringing the country one step closer to marijuana reform. The commission’s

recommendation on medical marijuana is one of the few ways in which its final report differs from a previously leaked draft of its report, which recommended limiting people to cultivating just five plants for medical purposes. “We did not want to put a specific amount because circumstances may be different for each individual who is prescribed medical cannabis,” Quinn McCartney, the commission’s co-chair, said yesterday. SEE PAGE THREE

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COURT AUDIT UNCOVERED PAYMENTS CHANGES By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net

AN Auditor General’s report into the Magistrate’s Court has exposed instances of cashiers allegedly altering payment receipts and nearly two dozen missing cheques. The findings prompted recommendations for investigations to be carried out over several inconsistencies. Another incident – a missing endorsed blank cheque for $6,000 that was later cashed — was directly given to the Royal Bahamas Police Force for further investigation. Auditor General Terrance Bastian noted differences between amounts that were paid for maintenance support – either child support or spousal support payments — versus the amount that cashiers posted to client cards for these payments. SEE PAGE FIVE

PLAN TO SELL OFF FLIGHT SERVICES PUT ON HOLD

MARIJUANA REPORT PUTS NO LIMIT ON MEDICAL USE By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

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By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

‘WE’LL SHUT YOU DOWN’ BUWASU Union president Dwayne Woods “threatened a total shut down” yesterday as he accused the Water & Sewerage Corporation of rolling back on a number of benefits. Full story - Page 6 Photo: Terrel W Carey Sr/Tribune Staff

THE government’s decision not to proceed with the Nassau Flight Services (NFS) privatisation is no reflection on the two final bidders’ quality, a top aviation official revealed yesterday. Algernon Cargill, director of aviation, confirmed to Tribune Business that the Minnis administration had decided to cease efforts to sell-off the stateowned ground handling services provider for the time being. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

SECOND SEX ASSAULT DURING HOME RAID Weekend By EARYEL BOWLEG ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

A WOMAN in New Providence was sexually assaulted on Tuesday night during a home invasion in Coral Harbour. Police said around 8pm, two men forced their way into a home and held a female resident at bay before robbing her of cash and personal items. One of the men sexually assaulted the female, before both men left the home and escaped

CORAL harbour in her grey 2008 Lexus IS-250 vehicle. This comes after a similar incident in

January on Marshall Road, where two robbers forced their way into a home and robbed the residents of cash and personal items. One of the burglars sexually assaulted a woman in the home before they escaped in one of the victims’ black 2014 Ford F-150 truck. This was just one of a string of home invasions reported in recent weeks. Royal Bahamas Police Force (RBPF)

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

SEE PAGE TWO

Meet the twins who are already YouTube stars in tomorrow’s

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