FRIDAY i’m lovin’ it!
HIGH 86ºF LOW 78ºF
CLOUDY, T-STORM
The Tribune Weekend L ATEST NE WS ON TRIBUNE242.COM
Volume: 111 No.127
FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016
PRICE - $1 (Abaco / Grand Bahama $1.50)
Fitness tips for children
Inside Weekend
Minnis mocks Loretta criticism
The Tribune
books film fashion mus ic tourism Friday, June food fitness 10, 2016 relationship s
Weekend
Exercise tip s for
BELLES OF THE BALL Page 13
Get fit, kid s!
youngsters
Health & Fitne ss,
pages 20&2 1
GUNMAN SHOT DEAD BY THE MAN HE TRIED TO ROB
By KHRISNA VIRGIL Tribune Staff Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net A GUNMAN was shot and killed early yesterday morning by a man he was intending to rob, police told The Tribune yesterday. The assailant, who was armed with a shotgun, approached a man who had SEE PAGE 12
Sarcastic response to her confidence in his ability By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net FNM Leader Dr Hubert Minnis reacted sarcastically yesterday to Loretta Butler-Turner’s criticism of his unclear positions on the constitutional referendum, saying he hopes her confidence in his ability to persuade voters will prompt her to support him in the general election. During an interview with The Tribune on Wednesday, the Long Island MP suggested Dr Minnis played a part in the failure of the referendum by failing to stand by his original convictions and appearing to shift them mid-stream instead.
“I was very happy to see that my colleague has such great confidence in me to make a statement that the referendum loss was a result of my minimal involvement,” Dr Minnis told reporters at the House of Assembly yesterday. “That confidence I am certain and I’m confident will be displayed or transferred also to the general election because I could not ask for such better confidence, that I could make such a great difference in the referendum, so the FNM looks forward to the difference I would make for the general election, getting the PLP out.” SEE PAGE SEVEN
PLP REACTION STARKLY DIFFERENT FROM 2002
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
THE reactions of Progressive Liberal Party politicians to the failed gender equality referendum is a stark turnaround from the positions taken following the first attempt to change the Constitution in 2002. For several senior PLP ministers, the concessions appear to be an ironic role reversal of their stance against the process undertaken by the Ingraham administration. On February 27, 2002, voters were asked whether they
approved of the removal of gender discrimination from the Constitution; the creation of a national commission to monitor the standards of teachers; the creation of an independent parliamentary commissioner; the creation of an independent election boundaries commission; and the increase of the retirement ages of judges from 60 to 65, and from 68 to 72 for appellate judges. The questions were overwhelmingly rejected, with Bahamians voting against the question on constitutional change by 66 per cent. SEE PAGE SIX
PASTOR Lyall Bethel speaking yesterday as the Vote No campaign held a press conference to discuss the referendum outcome. See page three for more from the conference. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
FINAL RESULTS IN - BUT ANALYSIS RAISES QUESTIONS OVER ACCURACY
By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net
REFERENDUM results from Fort Charlotte, Fox Hill, Marathon and Sea Breeze – the remaining four undisclosed constituencies from Tuesday’s vote – were released to the public yesterday, with all four adhering to result trends already set earlier this week. However, the results is-
sued by the Parliamentary Registration Department came with a myriad of varying figures and apparent incorrect totals identified by The Tribune. The final four constituencies firmly rejected all four referendum questions – with the widest margin on question four, which sought to prevent discrimination of any type based on sex, which was defined as being male or female.
The fourth Constitutional Amendment Bill, the most controversial, was abhorred by many in the religious community who viewed it as a means to open the door to same-sex marriage throughout the Bahamas. In Fort Charlotte, an estimated 5,427 voters were registered, but only 2,705 around 50 per cent - cast ballots on Tuesday, according to The Tribune’s assessment
of the data. The figures prepared by the Parliamentary Registration Department did not include the number of spoiled ballots. Voters in that constituency rejected question one by 1,468 “no” votes compared to 1,237 “yes” votes; question two by 1,723 to 945; question three by 1,590 to 1,077 and question four by 1,933 to 710.
The international agency insisted that human rights should not be determined by a vote, but protected by the state. “The recent referendum in the Bahamas was a missed opportunity to enshrine greater protection for gender equality in citizenship mat-
ters in Bahamian law and to prohibit discrimination based on sex,” a statement from Amnesty said. “The result puts at risk the citizenship rights of families, particularly children born into families with diverse nationalities or children born outside of
the Bahamas to Bahamian parents. “It also leaves women vulnerable to discrimination. Human rights should not be determined by a vote, but should always be protected by the state.” SEE PAGE TWO
SEE PAGE SIX
HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP: FAILED VOTE IS A MISSED OPPORTUNITY
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
HUMAN rights watchdog Amnesty International yesterday called the failed gender equality referendum a “missed opportunity” for reform.
REFERENDUM COVERAGE ON PAGES 1-10, WITH RESULTS ON PAGES 8-9