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VOLUME:115 No.200, SEPTEMBER 10TH, 2018
HO US E & 16 THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
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INSIGHT: FACTS AND FICTION ON LIFE AT THE DUMP PAGES NYGARD’S KICKED IN THE GROYNE
‘Throw it out’
• Smith defence team aims to seek dismissal of corruption case • Prosecution admits part of its evidence cannot be relied on
SIR STEPHEN’S FINAL JOURNEY
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
to cross-examine Health Minister Dr Duane Sands on the basis that the BTC phone bills associated with ATTORNEYS for Mrs Hanna proved that the former PLP Senator Frank call logs were flawed, and Smith on Saturday fore- that the defence should shadowed accusations of instead utilise the phone perverting the course of jus- bills. tice against the Crown after Mr Jenkins stressed that the prosecution conceded he was not conceding that that a key component of there has been a deliberate its evidence, the call logs manipulation between the by any officer accused and its or Crown witkey witness, are ness involved in flawed and thus the case. Howwarranted being ever, he said recently abanas the billing doned by the records were prosecution. being ventilated Damian in court, the Gomez, QC, Crown began to told Chief Magconsider what istrate Joyann the appropriate Ferguson-Pratt view would be that the defence to take concernwould in time ing the call logs, be making a no in that the proscase submission ecution doesn’t that there has want them to been a “deliberbe given “more ate falsification” weight than of the call they should be logs between given”. Smith and BarMr Jenkins bara Hanna effectively by agents of revealed that the Crown to the Crown had deceive the FRANK SMITH, top, and consequently Dr Duane Sands. defence in its abandoned preparation of the call logs as the case and the court into part of its evidence against drawing “adverse conclu- Smith, something Chief sions” against his client. Magistrate Ferguson-Pratt Mr Gomez’s submissions said she was just hearing for came after lead Crown the first time on Saturday, attorney Edward Jen- and something lead defence kins, QC, objected to the SEE PAGE FIVE defence using the call logs
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net THE government has given Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard less than a month to remove barriers he built out into the sea near his Lyford Cay home. The deadline is the first court-enforceable order against Mr Nygard in more than a decade, and represents a settlement reached between the Lyford Cay homeowner, the government and environmental advocacy group, Save The Bays (STB) embodied in what is called a Tomlin order. The barriers are called groynes, and are structures typically built out into the sea from a beach to impede the natural longshore transport of sand on an eroding shoreline. SEE PAGE TWO
ABACO - 900 SHANTY TOWN HOMES SET TO BE RAZED By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net THE government is tasked with finding alternative housing for nearly 1,000 households in shanty towns across Abaco as the Shanty Town Action Task Force (SATF) recommits to the self-imposed deadline of clearing unregulated communities on that island on or before July 31,2019. Despite the government’s charge that it will not subsidise the relocation of residents, local officials over the weekend observed the ambitious feat will require significant public investment to meet targets. SEE PAGE SIX
THE FUNERAL service for Sir Stephen Isaacs, the chief justice, on Friday. Family, friends and colleagues from across the political spectrum attended the funeral. See page 11 for more.
WEEK-LONG POWER CUTS AS SECOND BLAZE HITS BPL By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
NEW Providence can expect load shedding for the rest of the week after a fire caused unprecedented damage at Bahamas Power and Light’s Clifton Pier station over the weekend while a second blaze broke out last night at the same location. The first fire broke out around 10.30pm on Friday, according to BPL’s CEO
THE CLIFTON plant on Friday. Whitney Heastie, who has since appealed to the public to assist the electricity provider by conserving energy so it can meet energy demands. The second blaze erupted
last night at about 10pm and Fire Services said that three units were on the scene as The Tribune was going to press. In a statement yesterday, Progressive Liberal Party Leader Philip Davis called for full disclosure from the government in the face of what he claimed were “credible” social media reports alleging the fire was caused by negligence on the part of high-level employees. SEE PAGE THREE
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
VAT WINDFALL AS NEW RATE BEATS TARGETS
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
VAT collections in food stores since the 12 percent rate’s introduction have exceeded predictions by double digits, with Super Value’s owner admitting: “We were all wrong about breadbasket sales.” Rupert Roberts said Super Value collected “54 percent more VAT than expected” for July, before the bread basket foods’ zero rating took effect. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS