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VOLUME:116 No.126, JUNE 26TH, 2019
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
ALICIA WALLACE: TURN THE LIGHTS ON IN BPL THINKING
Rasta pipedream? Lawsuit seeks drug convictions wiped out and damages By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net A GROUP of Rastas is seeking to have all criminal convictions that relate to Rastafari possession, cultivation and supply of Indian hemp since 1963 wiped out. In a writ filed in the Supreme Court yesterday, lawyers for the Rastas also cite significant persecution for which they demand redress, from unconstitutional searches of persons and homes on suspicion of hemp possession to unconstitutional cutting of Rastas’ locks in prison. The plaintiffs, represented by Wayne Munroe, QC, and lawyers of his firm, want compensatory and vindicatory damages for breaches of their rights under Articles 15, 21, 22 and 26 of the constitution and are suing
By NATARIO MCKENZIE Tribune Business Reporter nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net
A MAJOR Bimini resort yesterday said it had lost a three-day block booking of all its rooms and marina as Bahamas Power & Light’s energy crisis extended beyond New Providence. Worried resorts and homeowners told Tribune Business that vacation rental guests were “cancelling left, right and centre” over the frequent outages. Beth Watson, of Bimini Big Game Club, told this newspaper via a third party
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BANK REPORT PINPOINTS FINANCIAL CRIME RISKS
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that the resort has “just lost a yearly group that does a buyout of hotel rooms and [marina] slips for three nights, [and] also a tour operator that I hosted to show why she should look at Bimini”. That equates to 62 lost room nights. One Bimini homeowner said that the outages and blackouts were creating “havoc” because they “are coming out of left field” due to the absence of any schedule from BPL identifying which areas - and when would be subject to load shedding. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
By MORGAN ADDERLEY Tribune Staff Reporter madderley@tribunemedia.net
“A GENUINE accident” is how Tourism Minister Dionisio D’Aguilar described the tour bus crash in Eleuthera that occurred on Monday, leaving more than a dozen people injured – but with no fatalities. Speaking to reporters yesterday outside Cabinet, Mr D’Aguilar said the driver lost control of the vehicle, but authorities do not yet know what caused the accident. He added he does not expect this incident to “blemish” Eleuthera as a destination. Both Mr D’Aguilar and Health Minister Dr Duane Sands praised the
the Attorney General for the actions of the Royal Bahamas Police Force and officers of the Bahamas Department of Correctional Services. They claim the practice of their livity - their “enlightened” lifestyle - has been hindered by decades of oppressive acts. Attorney General Carl Bethel has said the lawsuit has poor prospects of success. The writ says: “The hindrance relates to the persecution of Rastafari for the acts in practising their livity in the cultivation, possession and supply of Indian hemp which is one of the sacraments of Rastafari. “The plaintiffs claim that they have had their right to the protection of the privacy of their persons and homes breached by
BOOKINGS SCRAPPED IN BIMINI BLACKOUTS
ELEUTHERA BUS CRASH: ‘GOD WAS WITH US’
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
POTTER’S PLEA
SENATOR CLAY SWEETING, right, on a PLP tour of Potter’s Cay yesterday. Full story - Page 6 Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
TURIN TWO: WE’VE DONE ALL WE CAN By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net
FOREIGN Affairs Minister Darren Henfield said yesterday the government has done everything “humanly possible” to determine what led to the deaths of Blair John and Alrae Ramsey in Turin, Italy earlier this month. He was responding to recent criticism made by Progressive Liberal Party chairman Fred Mitchell
ALRAE RAMSEY, left, and Blair John who said the Minnis administration should take a stronger stance when it comes to the investigation. The bodies of Ramsey,
29, and John, 28, are expected to arrive in the country sometime this week, Mr Henfield told reporters. They were found in the Po river in Turin on June 4 and 5 respectively. “As I reiterate, my focus has been with the families. I am a father of three. My sons are about the ages of the young men who were lost - two young men with tremendous promise for this country and of course
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
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THE Central Bank yesterday pronounced that domestic banking presents a “low risk” for financial crime, with the main vulnerabilities stemming from three industries - gaming, real estate and money transmission. The regulator, unveiling findings based on a study of 2018 deposit cash flows in the Bahamian commercial banking industry, said the real estate sector’s size - together with the cashbased nature of web shop gaming and money transmission services - made them the greatest domestic anti-money laundering/ counter terror financing (AML/CFT) risks. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
TECHNOLOGY
SPACEX AND ITS BIGGEST ROCKET YET
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