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VOLUME:114 No.94, APRIL 5TH, 2017
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THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
EASTER COLOURING CONTEST: SEE PAGE 7 IN BUSINESS
Election date in early May
BAHA MAR GRANTED LICENCE FOR CASINO
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net BAHA Mar has received government approvals for its gaming licence, clearing the path for its casino operations ahead of its soft launch in three weeks, Tourism Minister Obie Wilchcombe confirmed yesterday. Mr Wilchcombe said the approvals for a gaming SEE PAGE SIX
Nottage says vote in first fortnight of next month By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net AS PRIME Minister Perry Christie last night described the Progressive Liberal Party’s (PLP) election campaign as a “short sprint” with a “big battle ahead,” a timeline of the “first week or the second week of May” was revealed as when the electorate could expect to head to the polls. Before a raucous crowd of party supporters last night at the T G Glover Primary School, Bain and Grants Town MP Dr Bernard Nottage, who also has responsibility for elections and referenda, said he was
certain that the party under Mr Christie’s leadership would return to the helm of government in the first half of May. An energetic and “confident” Mr Christie further revealed that Deputy Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis will “ring the bell” signaling the end of voter registration and the full swing of campaign season. “I say without a fear of contradiction that this is the best political party in the nation, in the region (and) in the world,” Dr Nottage said. “And when the first week or the second week of May comes, this party SEE PAGE THREE
FNM: CARNIVAL IS LATEST ‘BOO BOO’ FOR GOVT By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net
FREE National Movement (FNM) Leader Dr Hubert Minnis last night railed against Prime Minister Perry Christie and the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) government for failing to address crime, wasting value added tax (VAT) money and most recently
making a “boo boo” out of Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival. Addressing scores of supporters at a joint branch meeting in Golden Gates, Dr Minnis reiterated that an administration led by him would not “waste the people’s money on foolishness” but instead would privatise Junkanoo Carnival. SEE PAGE THREE
OMAR Archer pictured at the Magistrates Court yesterday.
Photo: Terrel W. Carey/Tribune Staff
OMAR ARCHER DENIED BAIL IN CRIMINAL LIBEL CASE By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net
OMAR Archer Sr’s apology yesterday to a magistrate for failing to appear in court four months ago for his criminal libel case was not sufficient to spare him being remanded to prison.
The 45-year-old Nassau Village resident was flanked by armed policemen as he was brought to the Nassau and South Streets Magistrate’s Court complex concerning a pending intentional libel charge brought against him in September, 2015. The allegation concerned
defamatory posts against a woman on the former political candidate’s Facebook page in April, 2015, in which he claimed she had a medical illness, was a substance abuser and had a baby in a bucket. The complainant had refuted the claims when the case commenced in No-
vember, 2016, and the matter was adjourned to December 30 for Archer Sr to present his defence. In yesterday’s hearing before Magistrate Derence Rolle-Davis, the magistrate informed Archer Sr that there was a warrant of SEE PAGE SEVEN
BANDS: ROAD FEVER PARADE FESTIVALGOERS TAKE TO SHOULD STAY UNCHANGED SOCIAL MEDIA IN ANGER By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
AFTER the postponement of Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival by two weeks, angry members of the Bahamas Carnival Band Owners Association (BCBOA) said they still want to forge ahead with the event’s Road Fever parade as originally scheduled. Representatives of the
BCBOA told the media yesterday that the group wants to keep the commitment of hosting the street parade on May 6. They also said the group will ask the government for permission so that overseas participants who have already paid for travel arrangements to attend the festival do not lose out. The Bahamas National Festival Commission SEE PAGE FIVE
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
FESTIVAL-GOERS far and wide expressed disgust yesterday over the sudden date change for the third annual Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival, accusing organisers of sabotaging the fledgling event and negatively impacting the culture of the popular showpiece. Participants interviewed
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
by The Tribune yesterday were incredulous at the explanation given by the Bahamas National Festival Commission (BNFC) and expressed shock that an event of its magnitude could be arbitrarily set aside. “I’ve never heard anything like this,” said Tahlia Welsh-Oliver, a 31-year-old Trinidadian who booked a cruise package for her SEE PAGE FIVE