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VOLUME:114 No122, MAY 17TH, 2017
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THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
BUSINESS: BAHAMAS WORST IN REGION FOR GUN CRIME
Doubts over PLP electricity deal
DAVIS SAYS NO DECISION YET ON DATE FOR NEW CONVENTION By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
FORMER Deputy Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis said his party’s intention is for him to be leader of the Official Opposition in Parliament, adding that it has not yet been determined when the Progressive Liberal Party will have its next convention. SEE PAGE FIVE
Turnquest and union chief unsure of agreement
By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net A DAY after former Prime Minister Perry Christie revealed his administration had signed off on agreements with a company to make electricity more affordable and reliable while at the same time generating significant revenue for the government days ahead of the general election, Deputy Prime Minister K Peter Turnquest and a top union official have expressed uncertainty over whether this deal is concrete. Speaking to The Tribune yesterday, Bahamas Electrical Workers Union (BEWU) President Paul Maynard said while he did hear of an agreement, it was not officially brought to the attention of the union. SEE PAGE THREE
THE FIRST Cabinet meeting held yesterday under the new government at the Office of the Prime Minister.
CASH CALLS FOR CLARITY OVER BANK OF THE BAHAMAS By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
FORMER Free National Movement Chairman Darron Cash yesterday called for a “full disclosure” of the Bank of the Bahamas’ “true state of affairs,” suggesting that the former Christie administration’s “systematic pattern of dis-
tortion and cover up” of the bank’s woes must come to an end. Mr Cash, in a statement, called on the Minnis administration to let the “chips fall where they may” in disclosing the bank’s financial state of affairs, adding that the public needs to know the “whole truth” about the SEE PAGE SIX
Photo: Terrel W. Carey/Tribune Staff
‘IT’S THE PEOPLE’S TIME MEANS WE WILL LISTEN TO THE PEOPLE’ By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
PRIME Minister Dr Hubert Minnis yesterday reiterated his charge that newly sworn in Cabinet ministers will not shirk their parliamentary duties as they take on their government portfolios. Dr Minnis noted that ministers were expected to report to their various con-
stituencies on a quarterly basis and keep tabs on the concerns of constituents as he addressed the press ahead of the first sitting of Cabinet. When the press arrived at 8.40am, Dr Minnis was already inside and his ministers began arriving at the Office of the Prime Minister around 9am. Dr Minnis likened last week’s landslide victory to the Free National Move-
ment’s first government win in 1992, underscoring that at both times the country had been “rocked with corruption”. “We won on the message ‘it’s the people’s time’ and we will adhere to that,” Dr Minnis said. “We will continue to listen to the people and we will be taking directives and working for the people. SEE PAGE SIX
TRUMP NOMINATES BAHAMAS AMBASSADOR By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net AMERICAN president Donald Trump has proposed prominent San Diego developer and veteran industrialist “Papa” Doug Manchester for the post of US ambassador to The Bahamas. The Nassau post has been
Covering The Bahamas for 40 years.
vacant since 2011, with the most recent nominee Cassandra Q Butts having died as she waited more than two years to be confirmed to the post under the former Obama administration. Ms Butts, 50, died in May last year, but was nominated for the ambassador post in 2014 by former US President Barack Obama.
The confirmation was said to have been held up by Republicans in the US Senate. If confirmed, the 74-yearold Trump supporter will serve as ambassador of the United States of America to the Commonwealth of The Bahamas, according to a statement issued by the US
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GOVT WILL NEED TO BORROW BUT WILL HONOUR POLICE PAY DEAL
By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net DEPUTY Prime Minister K Peter Turnquest said yesterday said the government intends to honour the commitment made by former Prime Minister Perry Christie to pay overtime to Royal Bahamas Police Force officers but “some degree of borrowing would be required” for this to happen. In an interview with The Tribune, Mr Turnquest, who is also minister of finance, said the officers will be paid, but he did not go into details. “We intend to honour the commitment. Some degree of borrowing would be required to help the government fulfil its obligations,” Mr Turnquest said after a Cabinet meeting Tuesday morning. SEE PAGE SIX