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VOLUME:114 No.83, MARCH 21ST, 2017
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
WOMAN: FELISHA ROSENDAHL DECORATES HER WAY TO SUCCESS
Gunman shoots worker dead
CARNIVAL BANDS SLAM WE MARCH CALL FOR DELAY By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net BAHAMAS Carnival Band Owners Association (BCBOA) president Dario Tirelli yesterday blasted We March Bahamas organisers for calling for Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival to be postponed less than six weeks before bands hit the streets. Mr Tirelli told The Tribune if We March insists on protesting Bahamas SEE PAGE SIX
Shock at broad daylight killing on construction site By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net POLICE are asking “what went wrong” after a male construction worker was shot to death on the job at the worksite of the new Post Office building on Tonique Williams-Darling highway yesterday afternoon. Chief Superintendent Clayton Fernander, the Officer-in-Charge of the Central Detective Unit (CDU), said the deceased, who appeared to be in his mid-40s, was the only construction worker killed by the lone gunman yesterday, despite being one of “a number of other employees” working at the old City Market site.
He confirmed that the deceased was known to police and had been “in and out of the system” prior to his death. However, Chief Supt Fernander said police have no motive for the killing, which pushes the murder count to 36 for the year, according to the The Tribune’s records. According to police, the construction worker was with a number of other employees in the westernmost portion of the plaza shortly after 2pm, when a lone gunman entered the area. The gunman shot the man in his body and then fled on foot, Chief Supt Fernander said. “We don’t know the motive at this time,” Chief Supt Fernander said. “The
A POLICEWOMAN comforts distraught onlookers at the scene of the murder at the old City Market site yesterday. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune staff
SEE PAGE TWO
INGRAHAM HITS OUT AT ‘LACK OF DEPUTY PM: FNM REPRESENTING LIGHTBOURN: PLP ‘LURING’ UNIONS INTERESTS OF ‘BAY STREET BOYS’ WITH CHANGES TO LABOUR LAWS TRANSPARENCY’ ON ECONOMY By NICO SCAVELLA By KHRISNA VIRGIL Mr Davis, speaking to a Butler-Turner also hit out at Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
FORMER Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham yesterday criticised government’s lack of transparency over the economy this term, challenging that the Christie-led administration’s fiscal performance over the past five years could not rival his party’s governance during the Great Recession. FORMER Prime Minister Hubert
SEE PAGE SIX Ingraham.
DEPUTY Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis last night cautioned voters to be wary of voting for the Free National Movement (FNM), claiming that former Deputy Prime Minister Brent Symonette’s return to frontline politics is proof that the party is representing the interests of the “Bay Street Boys” as opposed to “ordinary people”.
crowd of supporters during a town hall meeting at the CV Bethel High School last night, hit out at the FNM’s slogan “It’s the People’s Time”, suggesting that even though the Hubert Minnis-led party is trying to “present themselves different this time”, the return of Mr Symonette, the son of United Bahamian Party (UBP) Leader Roland T Symonette, is proof that the FNM “ain’t got no SEE PAGE SIX
Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net
MONTAGU MP Richard Lightbourn yesterday accused the governing Progressive Liberal Party of attempting to “lure” labour unions and their members into supporting the party with amendments to legislation that governs employee relations weeks ahead of the impending general election. Meanwhile, Official Opposition Leader Loretta
the Christie administration saying amid debate on the legislation, there were Bahamians who have not been paid for months for services to the government. She also pointed to certain members of Parliament who have consecutive absences from House sessions, which she said qualifies as grounds to vacate their parliamentary seats. The Opposition members lambasted the government during debate on Bills for SEE PAGE SIX
PRIVY COUNCIL OVERTURNS ‘NINETY’ KNOWLES RULING By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Privy Council yesterday paved the way for a battle over assets allegedly belonging to convicted drug trafficker, Samuel ‘Ninety’ Knowles, after it ruled that the US government’s $13.9 million confiscation order against him can be registered in the Bahamas. The UK court, the highest in the
Bahamian judicial system, overturned a previous Court of Appeal verdict that found the confiscation order could not be registered under the Proceeds of Crime Act because there was no written request from the US Attorney General to do so. The ruling enables the US government to seek forfeiture of Bahamasbased assets that it claims belong to Mr Knowles, paving the way for a new legal battle with his family, who allege the assets - including real es-
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tate, bank accounts and a car rental business at Nassau’s airport - were obtained via legitimate means. In December, 2015, Knowles filed a $70m law suit claiming damages from the government for the “emotional, mental torture” he experienced as a result of his “premature” extradition to the United States 11 years ago. He is currently being held at the Federal Correctional Institution in Butner, North Carolina. FULL STORY, SEE BUSINESS