04262016 edition

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Volume: 112 No.96

TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016 PRICE – $1 (Family Islands $1.50)

HELPING CANCER SURVIVORS SEE WOMAN SECTION

LETTER FROM OBAMA CARTOONIST COMMENDED - SEE PAGE NINE

Speaker shock at injunction

Major vows to defend freedom of Parliament By KHRISNA VIRGIL Tribune Staff Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net HOUSE Speaker Dr Kendal Major said he was both “astonished” and “offended” by the recent granting of an injunction, which bars members of Parliament from disclosing Save The Bays’ confidential information during proceedings, calling it a “pre-emptive onslaught” against the independence of the lower chamber. Dr Major said as this move attempts to usurp the authority of the Speaker and is contemptuous to the House of Assembly, he stood ready to have persons

SOCIAL SERVICES STAFF ‘USED FOOD COUPONS FOR THEMSELVES’ By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

STAFF members at the Department of Social Services participated in a “fraudulent” scheme in which they used food coupons intended for Bahamians on welfare to purchase groceries, according to Auditor General Terrance Bastian. The audit - covering the period July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2015, and tabled in SEE PAGE THREE

YOUNGSTERS SHOW UP IN STYLE FOR CLINIC FACILITY OPENING

brought to the bar of the House if necessary in defence of Parliament and its freedoms. In his first public dismissal of the April 21 interlocutory injunction granted by Justice Indra Charles, Dr Major was stern in denouncing the order. He said while the Office of the Attorney General seeks to have the injunction set aside, Parliament will continue to function as it wishes. He added that he was unaware of anywhere in the Commonwealth where the court is allowed to curtail the actions of Parliament. SEE PAGE SIX

FITZGERALD JUDGE MAY BE ‘MAY BE HELD IN HELD TO ACCOUNT CONTEMPT’ BY COMMITTEE

By SANCHESKA BROWN Tribune Staff Reporter sbrown@tribunemedia.net HOUSE Speaker Dr Kendal Major said yesterday that Jerome Fitzgerald may be held in contempt of the House of the Assembly if it is found that the private emails he read in Parliament from members of Save the Bays were obtained illegally. While making several rulings in the House of Assembly, Dr Major said in the future, members who SEE PAGE SIX

By KHRISNA VIRGIL Tribune Staff Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net SUPREME Court Justice Indra Charles along with Save The Bays Director Fred Smith, QC, and lawyer Ferron Bethel were named in a resolution yesterday in Parliament for the Committee on Privilege to determine whether they should be held in contempt of the House of Assembly. The resolution, which was moved by Marathon MP Jerome Fitzgerald, also SEE PAGE SIX

GARVIN Tynes Primary School perform at the opening ceremony of the Flamingo Gardens cold storage facility. See page two for the full story. Photo: Tim Clarke/Tribune Staff

BEC EXECUTIVES QUIZZED AT BRIBERY TRIAL

By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net

FORMER executives at the Bahamas Electricity Corporation were probed yesterday on their knowledge of the Inter-American Development Bank’s role in the bidding process concerning a French company’s tender for the New Providence Expansion Phase Three contract with BEC.

Former BEC General Manager Bradley Roberts was called to the witness stand to give evidence on how Alstom SA, formerly ABB Generacion, was awarded the multi-million dollar project in 2001. Crown prosecutor Garvin Gaskin asked Mr Roberts if the bidders of the DA-12 contract paid BEC executives to reverse the decision against Korean rival-firm Hanjung. “That is forbidden,

I don’t know anything about that,” Mr Roberts said. “My attitude is to do the right thing for the Bahamian people. I don’t tolerate that. There are times when dealing with international contracts, companies attempt to get close but that’s to the people with the maximum influence. We (the BEC board) have limited influence. In my experience we are professional,” he said.

Wayne Munroe, QC, asked Mr Roberts if there were any dissenting views on the recommendation to award Hanjung the contract. Mr Roberts said “no.” He did confirm the prior testimony of former BEC Chairman J Barrie Farrington that board members were called to a Cabinet meeting to defend the recommendation. SEE PAGE SEVEN

27 YEARS IN JAIL FOR KILLER OF BREASTFEEDING MOTHER

By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net

A MAN received a 27year sentence yesterday for his involvement in the fatal attempted carjacking of a woman who was breastfeeding her baby six years ago.

Valentino Dorsett, 33, stood trial in February on a murder and attempted armed robbery charge concerning an incident that led to the death of 29-year-old Tagia Soles-Armony the night of August 7, 2009. A jury returned a hung verdict of 7-5 on the murder charge and a 9-3 guilty ver-

dict on the lesser charge of manslaughter, the latter of which trial judge Justice Ian Winder accepted. Dorsett was also convicted of attempted armed robbery by 11-1 and was told that he would be sentenced in April. “The circumstances of this case is a most tragic

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

of circumstances,” Justice Winder said yesterday. “If we accept the evidence of (pathologist) Dr Caryn Sands of the bullet’s trajectory, it is only by a sheer miracle the child she was nurturing was not struck in the process.” SEE PAGE SEVEN


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