08012018 NEWS

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VOLUME:115 No.173, AUGUST 1ST, 2018

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

ALICIA WALLACE: WHAT FRIGHTENS US ABOUT IMMIGRATION?

Pilot to blame • Not qualified to fly crash plane • Nervous when flying in clouds • 129 illegal flights in 11 weeks • No chance anyone could have survived Andros disaster By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net THE six people who died in January when the pilot of their plane lost control of the aircraft had zero chance of survival, according to the Air Accident Investigation Department’s report of the crash. The accident, which killed three men, two women and a tenyear-old girl, “was not survivable due to the high speed, high angle contact

THE PLANE that crashed. (with the ocean) and magnitude of the deceleration forces,” the report said. “All indications were that the aircraft made contact with the ocean straight in (at approximately 180 degrees, nose, propeller

MAN DEAD IN LATE-NIGHT SHOOTING A MAN was shot dead last night in a late-night incident. As The Tribune was going to press, police confirmed a man had died following a shooting at Burial Ground Corner off East Street. The news came on the same day that Police

Commissioner Anthony Ferguson reported that murders in the first half of the year had dropped by a quarter compared to last year - with 54 from January to June, down from 73 last year. SEE PAGE SIX

and engines first, as evidenced from propeller and airframe signature marks) before cartwheeling several times prior to stopping.” The January 17 accident off Andros reignited concerns and debate about the aviation sector’s longstanding “hacker” problem which officials have since vowed to address. The crash report portrays the pilot, Darren Clarke, as a rule-breaker SEE PAGE THREE

PILOT DARREN CLARKE, who was killed in the crash.

FEES REVOLUTION TO HELP FUND $50M HEALTH DEFICIT By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net HEALTH officials will meet today to decide on the implementation of up to 500 fees at the Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) as they seek to narrow a $50m funding shortfall. Dr Duane Sands, minister of health, yesterday told Tribune Business that the Public Hospitals Authority (PHA) and other healthcare system elements are faced with “making some difficult decisions” that might result in “certain programmes and services” being stopped or cut back. He suggested this might include reduced hours and/ or closures at some public

HEALTH Minister Dr Duane Sands sector clinics, as the Government’s fiscal crisis means it no longer has “an infinite source of funds” to underwrite a system where 87 percent of PHA patients pay nothing for the care they receive. Reiterating that the

days of a “free lunch” were over when it came to healthcare, especially for Bahamians who can afford to pay or have medical insurance, Dr Sands said he was targeting “anomalies” that had allowed such persons a ride at the taxpayer’s expense. He cited the “exemption” that allows civil servants to enjoy free healthcare from the PHA, even though the Government pays $75m annually for them to have medical insurance, as one such “anomaly”. The Minister also pledged to “aggressively go after” potential revenue sources such as Road Traffic Act accident claims. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

OFFICER GUILTY OF UNLAWFUL KILLING By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net

THE 2013 shooting death of Girred Clarke at the hands of police at a party was ruled as an unlawful killing by a Coroner’s Court jury yesterday. A unanimous verdict was returned to Coroner Jeanine Weech-Gomez nearly an hour after she excused the jury to deliberate on a verdict of lawful or unlawful killing in the August 17, 2013, Allen Drive shooting. SEE PAGE FIVE


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08012018 NEWS by tribune242 - Issuu