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The Tribune L ATEST NE WS ON TRIBUNE242.COM

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Volume: 112 No.148

TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2016

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‘Petty’ Minnis blasted by Cash FNM leader ‘removing committee members’ in search for votes By TANEKA THOMPSON Tribune News Editor tmthompson@tribunemedia.net FORMER Free National Movement (FNM) Chairman Darron Cash has accused party leader Dr Hubert Minnis of removing two people from the FNM’s Executive Committee, which he alleged was done “for the purpose of adding a few more votes at convention”. In a scathing statement released to The Tribune yesterday, the former senator accused Dr Minnis of being “petty” and “vindictive,” saying the Killarney MP does not want those who have opposing views around him. Mr Cash said he has also heard rumours that he too

MARCH ON, BAHAMALAND

was going to be removed from the FNM’s Executive Committee. He said while this has not been confirmed, he would not be surprised if it happened. Dr Minnis could not be reached for comment yesterday and FNM Chairman Sidney Collie would not confirm or deny the allegations when contacted. “I have heard about and read the reports on social media regarding the possibility of my removal from the Executive Committee by Hubert Minnis,” Mr Cash said in his statement. “While I have not received any confirmation to that effect from the ‘leader’ it would not surprise me if he did such a thing. SEE PAGE SEVEN

THE recent call from Long Island MP Loretta Butler-Turner for convicted murderers to face a minimum 30-year sentence without parole would infringe on the discretionary power of judges, Bar Association President Elsworth Johnson said. He also urged members of the executive and legislative branches of government to “loosen their grasp” on the judiciary, saying that the politicisation

of crime has hampered the “conceptualisation” of anticrime measures. “Laws being drafted and enacted in a reactionary manner will not offset or resolve the true root causes of crime,” Mr Johnson said when contacted for comment. “Calls like this gives the public the impression that those in the judicial branch of government are not being tough enough. When you take that stance you force judges into a spot where they can no longer use their SEE PAGE FIVE

Home Ownership Seminar Series Home Ownership: Mortgage 101 Where to start? How to switch? Legal Facts? Thursday, July 14, 2016 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Ballroom C, Melia Nassau Beach Resort You have questions. We have answers. Scotiabank. Your home ownership partner. Visit bahamas.scotiabank.com/thehomeyouown

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Trademarks of The Bank of Nova Scotia, used under licence.

By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net TALL Pines MP Leslie Miller and former Cabinet minister George Smith want the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) to hold a convention in September instead of November, arguing that sooner rather than later the party needs to organise itself and excite its base in preparation for the next general election. “Politics is a funny game,” Mr Miller told The Tribune yesterday. “The longer the convention goes on and the decision is made to have it in November, it is telling us in Parliament and other PLPs around the country that they are trying to avert anyone standing for any of the positions that could be vacant. I don’t think that should be said to people. It would really be a slap in the face not to call a convention earlier than November.” SEE PAGE SEVEN

BID FOR PROBE INTO BRIBERY AT BEC AFTER RAMSEY CASE By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

30-YEAR SENTENCE CALL BY BUTLER-TURNER CRITICISED By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net

‘BRING THE DATE OF PLP CONVENTION FORWARD’

THE FLAG of The Bahamas fluttering in front of a backdrop of fireworks at the 43rd Independence Day celebration held at Clifford Park on Saturday. For more photographs from the event, see pages 10, 11 and 13. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff

MITCHELL: NO FALLOUT FROM THE US OVER MINISTRY’S TRAVEL ADVISORY By SANCHESKA BROWN Tribune Staff Reporter sbrown@tribunemedia.net FOREIGN Affairs and Immigration Minister Fred Mitchell said yesterday there has been “absolutely” no fall out from diplomats in the United States after his ministry issued a travel warning advising Bahamians, young men in particular, to exercise caution in their dealings with police in US cities. Mr Mitchell told The Tribune that the advisory

released on Friday was “nothing out of the ordinary” as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has issued similar advisories warning Bahamians travelling to the US on several occasions. The advisory was issued on July 8 in the wake of police-related shootings in the United States that have resulted in the deaths of black men. Five police officers were killed and seven wounded on Thursday night during a protest in Dallas, Texas,

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over recent fatal shootings of black men by police in Louisiana and Minnesota. The statement warned Bahamian citizens to “exercise appropriate caution” especially in cities affected by “tensions ... over shootings of young black males by police officers.” “In particular young males are asked to exercise extreme caution in affected cities in their interactions with the police,” the travel warning said.

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THE Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) is calling for the establishment of a Parliamentary Select Committee to investigate a bribery scandaldating back more than a decade involving Alstom SA and the Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC), PLP Chairman Bradley Roberts said yesterday. His statement came after the Supreme Court decided not to jail 79-year-old former BEC board member Fred Ramsey who was found guilty of receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars from Alstom to influence the awarding of contracts between 1993 and 2003. SEE PAGE THREE

ROLLINS WANTS INQUIRY INTO BAHA MAR

By SANCHESKA BROWN Tribune Staff Reporter sbrown@tribunemedia.net FORT Charlotte MP Dr Andre Rollins said yesterday that the status of the Baha Mar project is more “worrisome” than Prime Minister Perry Christie is letting the public know. Dr Rollins, who is shadow minister of national security, said a new Free National Movement administration must “urgently convene” a Commission of Inquiry to look into the matter. SEE PAGE SIX

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