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Volume: 119 No.138, June 13, 2022
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I’VE NOTHING TO APOLOGISE FOR
Speaker insists she stands by criticism of NEMA’s director By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net HOUSE Speaker Patricia Deveaux yesterday maintained she sees nothing wrong with her criticism levelled at National Emergency Management Agency director Captain Stephen Russell and sees no need to apologise. In an interview with The Tribune yesterday, the Bamboo Town MP explained that her rebuke of Captain Russell was out of concern for residents in her constituency and the Bahamian people and not
for political reasons. She also advised that people must learn to take constructive criticism to “become stronger and do better” when there is a need for improvement. “My thing is this,” she said, “and this was not political, and this was not personal for me. “It was me acting in my capacity as the member for Parliament for Bamboo Town, okay. When I would have gotten into the Bamboo Town area, first and foremost that was a catastrophe.” SEE PAGE THREE
BAHAMIAN gas stations say “no business operates” on the unsustainable seven percent gross margins they are enduring amid warnings the sector may have to cut jobs and operating hours to survive. George Cartwright, owner/operator of the Esso
station at the junction of Wulff Road and Montrose Avenue, told Tribune Business: “I think you might have a reduction in employees due to the low turnover we’re having. That could happen. We might end up going to reduced hours, and we might end up going to reduced shop business hours also.
FULL STORY - SEE BAHAMAS
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net TOURISM executives are warning The Bahamas “stands out like a sore thumb” over its continued COVID entry testing measures after the US eliminated such restrictions with effect from midnight yesterday. Robert Sands, the Bahamas Hotel and Tourism Association’s (BHTA) president, told Tribune Business the country “cannot be the last man standing” by still demanding that all visitors produce a negative COVID test taken within 72 hours of travel when multiple Caribbean rivals have eradicated all such restrictions. He and other resort executives, speaking after the US move, said The Bahamas’ testing mandate threatens the competitiveness of its major industry and the post-COVID “recovery momentum”. FULL STORY - SEE BAHAMAS
$50M REVENUE FROM TESTING DURING CRISIS By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
GAS PRICE CRISIS WIPING OUT RETAILERS’ PROFITS By YOURI KEMP Tribune Business Reporter ykemp@tribunemedia.net
US ABANDONS COVID TESTS FOR VISITORS
HANDS-ON HELP FROM NFL STARS FORMER NFL cornerback Akeem Aguste, who played for the Cleveland Browns and the Seattle Seahawks, joined Kansas City Chiefs pair Rashad Fenton, Melvin Ingram III, and Colts wide receiver Mike Strachan and other NFL personalities for a mangrove clean-up and planting at Bonefish Pond National Park alongside the Bahamas National Trust and others. See PAGE SEVEN for more photographs. Photo: Donavan McIntosh/Tribune Staff
KILLINGS PROMPT PLEA TO FAMILIES By EARYEL BOWLEG Tribune Staff Reporter ebowleg@tribunemedia.net
THREE murders occurred within 24 hours in New Providence this weekend, the latest of them a man who was killed after a basketball game at AF Adderley Junior High School yesterday - prompting a call for people who know relatives possess illegal firearms to “do the honourable thing”.
A BODY is taken from the scene after a shooting near the AF Adderley Junior High School gymnasium yesterday. The latest incident happened shortly before 1pm.
Police have not released the man’s identity, however a woman who identified herself as a relative, said he is Randy Williams, 29. Police press liaison Superintendent Audley Peters told reporters that police were called to AF Adderley Junior High School as the result of the shooting incident which happened in the vicinity of the gymnasium. SEE PAGE TWO
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
DOCTORS Hospital yesterday said it will adjust its COVID testing workforce to “match” the demand falloff after generating “north of $50m” in revenues from 1.3m such screenings over the past two years. Dennis Deveaux, the provider’s chief financial officer, said apart from its Winton site, which was removed last week, it intends to maintain all other COVID-related infrastructure despite the US eliminating its testing requirement. FULL STORY - SEE BAHAMAS
INSIGHT
KDK REPORT - FINDING A WAY THROUGH ADVERSITY SEE PAGE NINE