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Volume: 121 No.52, February 6, 2024
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‘MY FAMILY MUST SLEEP LIKE A DOG’ Haitian father of three speaks out after latest shanty demolitions By JADE RUSSELL Tribune Staff Reporter jrussell@tribunemedia.net A HAITIAN father of three said his family must sleep “like a dog” in his truck after bulldozers destroyed his home of more than 20 years in a New Providence shanty town yesterday. Matny Fren screamed as
his house was demolished, one of several people who reacted emotionally. Many residents were dragging pillowcases filled with clothes, toiletries, cooking supplies, and other necessities when The Tribune visited the area yesterday. One woman sat on the muddy ground while SEE PAGE TWO
HAITIAN father Matny Fren was emotional yesterday, after his home of more than 20 years was demolished at the Area 52 shanty town in the Coral Harbour area. Photo: Moise Amisial
Coroner: ‘UnaCCeptable’ to fail Cruise lines’ private islands VATto disClose toxiCology report free status set to end next month By PAVEL BAILEY Tribune Staff Reporter pbailey@tribunemedia.net THE failure of a senior police forensics officer to disclose a toxicology report on three men police killed in Blair Estates in 2019 was deemed “unacceptable” by
the coroner yesterday as the inquest into the matter continued. Police killed Tony Jamal “Foolish” Penn Smith, Valentino “T-Boy” Pratt and Trevor “Coopz” Cooper on Commonwealth Avenue in SEE PAGE THREE
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE government is planning tax reforms that will hit the cruise lines’ Bahamian private islands and end their nine-year VAT-free status, it was confirmed yesterday. Simon Wilson, the Ministry of Finance’s financial secretary, told Tribune Business that changes currently set to take effect from March
FINANCIAL secretary Simon Wilson 1 are designed to place the cruise lines’ private island activities on a taxation level
playing field with Bahamian providers who service their guests at other destinations. He confirmed the authenticity of a Department of Inland Revenue “guidance document” obtained by this newspaper which reveals the tax authorities plan to change the tax treatment of goods and services supplied to millions of tourists who visit these locations . FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
King Charles halts dUties as he starts CanCer treatment
see page 11
JanUary’s 21 mUrders most in at least a deCade govt signs By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune News Editor rrolle@tribunemedia.net THE murder rate in January increased by 163 per cent compared to January 2023. The 21 murders last
month were the most the country has recorded in January in at least a decade. According to The Tribune’s records, eight people were killed in 2023, eight in 2022, ten in 2021, six in 2020, two in 2019, nine in
2018, 14 in 2017, eight in 2016, ten in 2015, and 11 in 2014. The record for murders in a year is 145 in 2015. This year’s murder tally increased after a man was
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
SEE PAGE THREE
new agreement with Usa for pre-ClearanCe see page five