02102017 news

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Volume:114 No.56, FEBRUARY, 10TH, 2017

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Friday, February 10, 2017 culture entertainment film fashion music shoppi ng society

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Flying Fish Pages 8&9

Art therapy

Tragedy sparks painter’s creativity

Bid to intercept letters, emails

Art, pages 14&15

BRAN: I’D QUIT SENATE OVER LORETTA ROW

By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net DEMOCRATIC National Alliance Leader Branville McCartney yesterday dismissed recent assertions by Long Island MP Loretta Butler-Turner that he threw her “under the bus,” charging that if Mrs ButlerTurner feels so strongly about her accusations, he is “ready and willing” to resign as leader of opposition business in the Senate. SEE PAGE SIX

Bill tabled to allow THOUSANDS COME TO HEAR HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR’S TALE police to snoop on communications By TANEKA THOMPSON Tribune News Editor tmthompson@tribunemedia.net THE government has tabled a bill in the House of Assembly that aims to create a “single legal framework” that would allow the Commissioner of Police to obtain a warrant from a judge to intercept and examine a person’s communications from telecommunications operators, internet providers and postal services for a period of three months. According to the Interception of Communications Bill, 2017, which was tabled on Wednesday night, this would be done in the “interest of national security,” which is defined as

protecting the country from “threats of sabotage, espionage, terrorist acts, terrorism or subversion”. The legislation will provide for the “interception of all communications networks regardless of whether they are licensed as public or not”. The bill says this will include public telecommunications operators, internet providers and postal services. Intercepting, among other provisions, includes the use of a “monitoring device”, physically viewing/ inspecting the contents of any communication and diverting any communication from its intended destination, the bill notes. SEE PAGE SIX

EXTRA SEAT IN PLP STRONGHOLD ‘SHOWS DESPERATION OF GOVT’ By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net DEMOCRATIC National Alliance Leader Branville McCartney said yesterday that Prime Minister Christie’s addition of an extra seat in a perceived “PLP stronghold” shows how desperate the government has become. During a press conference at DNA headquar-

ters yesterday, Mr McCartney said Mr Christie can “change the boundaries and change the names all he wants” but he cannot change the fact “that the PLP will lose the election”. Mr McCartney’s comments came one day after Mr Christie tabled the House of Assembly Revision of Boundaries and Re-distribution of Seats SEE PAGE FIVE

HOLOCAUST survivor Eva Schloss, standing at left, looks out at the crowd of thousands that turned out last night to hear her talk at the Melia resort last night. She shared her memories of the holocaust and of her childhood friend, Anne Frank. Turn to page two for more photographs from the event. Photo: Terrel W. Carey/Tribune Staff

MINNIS THANKS BUTLER-TURNER - BUT SAYS WE MARCH LONG ISLAND DOES NOT BELONG TO HER ORGANISERS By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

FREE National Movement Leader Dr Hubert Minnis took a swipe at his party’s former Deputy Leader Loretta-Butler Turner last night, telling supporters at a rally in Long Island that the constituency “doesn’t belong to her”. Last night’s rally was held to introduce attorney Adrian Gibson as the party’s

candidate for that constituency. During his speech, Dr Minnis also ratcheted up attacks against Prime Minister Perry Christie, calling him the most “disorganised prime minister in the history of The Bahamas”. The rally in Long Island comes weeks after the FNM rescinded its ratification of Mrs Butler-Turner, the island’s current MP. Dr Minnis referred to the Official Opposition leader during his speech yesterday,

saying: “I want to thank Loretta Butler-Turner for her service in Long Island. I wish her well in her future endeavours, but she must know that Long Island doesn’t belong to her.” He spent much of his speech imploring voters to keep their support in the FNM, portraying the Progressive Liberal Party as a group that has done little for the island. SEE PAGE THREE

WARNING OF ‘IMMENSE’ PROBLEMS FOR NHI By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net AS the Christie administration faces a time crunch to implement the primary care phase of National Health Insurance before Bahamians head to the

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polls this year, the government is challenged by “immense” logistical problems because public facilities are not structurally sound, a high level NHI insider has told The Tribune. According to the source, who is intimately involved with planning intricate

details of the healthcare scheme, the committee appointed to decide how the $24m catastrophic fund will be spent has also reached a stalemate because the plans in this regard are “horribly ambitious”. SEE PAGE SIX

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SEEK TO RAISE $120,000

By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net WE March Bahamas plans on staging 12 more “events and protests” throughout the Bahamas before the next general election, including candidates debates, and has launched a Go Fund Me page to raise $120,000 for these initiatives. We March Bahamas lead organiser Ranard Henfield has been at odds with the government since his group staged a massive protest on November 25, 2016, where more than a thousand people marched from Arawak Cay to downtown Nassau. SEE PAGE THREE


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