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Volume: 112 No.97
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Transgender plea for rights Call to be treated equally By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net BAHAMAS Transgender, Intersex United (BTIU) yesterday launched its multi-level equality campaign, “Bahamian Trans Lives Matter”, which seeks to secure equal rights for transgendered Bahamians as the debate about the upcoming gender equality referendum continues. During a press conference at the Hilton on Tuesday, BTIU representatives called on the Christie administration to ensure that the fundamental rights of all genders of Bahamians - male, female and transgendered - are protected. However, the group stressed that it is not trying to shift the focus of the gender equality referendum. The group is calling for equal access to healthcare,
SOCIAL Services Minister Melanie Griffin said further investigations will be conducted into the damning revelations highlighted by Auditor General Terrance Bastian’s report into the Department of Social Services which was tabled in the House of Assembly on Monday. The report revealed weak internal controls in the de-
By KHRISNA VIRGIL Tribune Staff Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net WHILE the March 1 deadline for members of Parliament to file financial disclosures has passed, three more MPs have confirmed that they have yet to declare their assets, which is required by law. Marco City MP Greg Moss, Mt Moriah MP Arnold Forbes and Central and South Andros MP Picewell Forbes told The Tribune they intended to file in the coming days. Another elected official, South Beach MP Cleola Hamilton turned and walked away, refusing to answer questions about the status of her financial declarations when she was approached outside of the House of Assembly on Monday. SEE PAGE SIX
MINNIS URGES PROSECUTION OVER LACK OF DECLARATIONS
By TANEKA THOMPSON Tribune News Editor tmthompson@tribunemedia.net
TORI CULMER, right, speaking yesterday at the Transgender and Inter Sex Community press conference at the British Colonial Hilton. Also pictured is, left, Alicia Seymour and Phylicity Smith. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff education and employment without discrimination. Lead spokesperson for the group, Alexus D’Marco
affirmed that members of BTIU, and to a greater extent those in the wider lesbian, bi-sexual, gay and
transgender (LBGT) community, are forced to live in unwarranted circumstances due to the confines of so-
cially accepted behaviours in The Bahamas. SEE PAGE THREE
GRIFFIN: WE WILL INVESTIGATE AUDITOR’S FINDINGS
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
THREE MORE MPS FAILED TO DECLARE THEIR ASSETS
partment that created opportunities for fraud and waste. “I anticipate that there will be further investigations, but I don’t wish to preempt what is happening,” Mrs Griffin said when asked about the finding that millions of dollars were paid to vendors without apparent formal authorisation from the director of the department as is required. While some employees are already facing punishment for engaging in food
coupon fraud, it is unclear if any senior management member will face repercussions for allowing as much as $3,682,636 in cheque requests to be processed without the director’s signature. Pressed on the nature of the investigation she said would take place, Mrs Griffin didn’t confirm if it will be an internal or external investigation. “I want to say that we have already began to implement the recommendations from the auditor general to mod-
ernise the system that we have been plagued with all these years and there will be an investigation, but I don’t want to preempt anything,” she said. One of Mr Bastian’s more significant findings is that some staff members at the department participated in a fraudulent scheme in which they used food coupons intended for Bahamians on welfare to purchase groceries. Asked about this, Mrs Griffin said officials found
the department’s reliance on food coupons overwhelming, hence their move to digitise the system through the creation of prepaid debit cards. “Over the years, successive governments have known that the paper intensive system we have with food coupons was open to opportunities for fraud so that is why we would’ve ensured that we put in place social safety net reform SEE PAGE SIX
POLICE OFFICER IS LAST CROWN WITNESS CALLED IN BEC BRIBERY CASE
By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net
A JURY heard yesterday that Freddie Solomon Ramsey, accused of accepting a bribe, denied any involvement in the Alstom SA/Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC) bribery scheme and was asked more than 100 questions during an interview in police custody.
Inspector Deborah Thompson, of the Central Detective Unit, was the last Crown witness called to give evidence of her role in the investigation of allegations that the French company Alstom SA allegedly paid more than $300,000 to a BEC board member to influence the awarding of the New Providence Phase Two and Three contracts between 1999 and 2003. She was given the inves-
tigation on May 1, 2015 by Deputy Commissioner of Police Anthony Ferguson, the jury was told. “A production order was served on (former BEC General Manager) Kevin Basden requiring him to produce board minutes, tender evaluations and anything related to the awarding of the contracts to Alstom,” the witness said. SEE PAGE EIGHT
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
FREE National Movement Leader Dr Hubert Minnis last night called on Attorney General Allyson Maynard-Gibson to do her job and prosecute those members of Parliament who have not disclosed their assets to the Public Disclosure Commission. On Monday, The Tribune revealed that at least ten MPs, by their own admission, had not filed their annual disclosures by March 1 as required by law. Yesterday, three more MPs admitted they had missed the deadline. Two FNM MPs, Richard Lightbourn and Andre Rollins, last week revealed to The Tribune that they had not yet filed, however Dr Rollins promised the matter would be dealt with this week, while Mr Lightbourn SEE PAGE SIX
MAN WHO KILLED SON ASKS FOR PSYCHIATRIC HELP
By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net
A MAN who admitted responsibility for the beating death of his two-yearson asked Court of Appeal judges yesterday to assist him in receiving psychological help. David Alexander Stuart, 24, told Justices Dame Anita Allen, Jon Isaacs and Stella Crane-Scott in a preliminary appeal hearing that he has been haunted as SEE PAGE EIGHT