04072022 NEWS AND SPORT

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Volume: 119 No.95, April 7, 2022

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NIB WORKERS VOTE TO STRIKE By KHRISNA RUSSELL Tribune Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net

VOTING under way yesterday in the ballot by the Public Managers Union at BCPOU Hall. Photo: Donavan McIntosh/ Tribune Staff

THE majority of Public Managers Union members yesterday voted in favour of taking industrial action against the National Insurance Board after 29 months of wrangling for resolution of outstanding issues. Union members both in New Providence and the Family Islands cast ballots in a strike vote, which will allow the PMU to obtain a strike certificate from the Department of Labour. While the official count from all of the islands had not been tallied up to press time, PMU President Cassandra Lewis said a preliminary count in New Providence showed that of around 100 ballots cast, only six members were opposed to striking. This, she said, was sufficient evidence

that members wanted to be compensated for the work they have done and are tired of waiting. Mrs Lewis said the successful strike vote did not necessarily mean the union would strike, but it intended to use the right if there was not swift action from NIB. “Why do we have to always fight for what we want?” Mrs Lewis said following the vote. “I would much rather be in the boardroom negotiating. “If you say to me the board has no money and we all struggle together we can understand that. But it can’t be business as usual. Show me that you don’t have the money. “But we are really hoping they would come to the table with a view to resolving the issues.” SEE PAGE THREE

TRIBUNE ARTIST BECOMES CULTURAL AMBASSADOR By PAVEL BAILEY THE Ministry of Foreign Affairs celebrated the appointment of seven new envoys at an official swearing-in ceremony at the Balmoral Club yesterday. Among them was Tribune cartoonist and “celebrity artist” Jamaal Rolle who has been appointed ambassador-at-large for cultural affairs. Minister of Foreign Affairs Fred Mitchell as well as several other

NEW ambassador-at-large for cultural affairs Jamaal Rolle with Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis yesterday. government officials were in attendance as the seven envoys took their oath of office for ambassadorial appointments.

Former Cabinet minister Hope Strachan has been appointed ambassador/ permanent representative to UNESCO; former BTC CEO Leon Williams is ambassador to the International Telecommunications Union; former Cabinet minister Damian Gomez has been made ambassador-atlarge to the Inter-American Council on Human Rights; and former Marathon SEE PAGE TWO PLUS JAMAAL’S FAREWELL CARTOON ON PAGE SIX

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

FIVE KILLED SINCE SUNDAY IN DEADLY MURDER TOLL By EARYEL BOWLEG Tribune Staff Reporter ebowleg@tribunemedia.net TWO men were killed in separate homicides just hours apart on Tuesday night - and another in a shooting last night. Five people have been killed since Sunday. Shortly before 10pm on Tuesday, police were alerted to the sounds of gunshots on Second Street and Poinciana Avenue. “Officers were dispatched, and on their arrival they found an adult male lying on Cynthia Pratt Park with gunshot injuries about the body. Emergency Medical Services visited the scene and following their assessment it was SEE PAGE THREE

GOVT ASKS FOR FILES ON BAHAMIANS’ ITALY DEATHS By PAVEL BAILEY

FOREIGN Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell said the government has asked Italian officials for the files connected to the investigation of the deaths of two Bahamian men who died mysteriously in 2019, but have yet to receive them. Bahamians Alrae Ramsey and Blair John were found dead in Italy on June 4 and June 5, 2019. Their bodies were discovered lifeless in the Po river in Turin. SEE PAGE FIVE

TOO LENIENT ON POACHERS - BUT NO MORE JAIL TIME By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

THE Court of Appeal’s president has declined to impose harsher punishment on three Dominican poachers who rammed a Royal Bahamas Defence Force vessel despite branding their original sentences as “lenient”. Sir Michael Barnett said he and his fellow appeal judges, were “not satisfied that it is in the interest of justice” to increase the custodial term given they were due to be released in a week’s time. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS


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