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VOLUME:116 No.185, SEPTEMBER 19TH, 2019
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United in prayer
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INSIDE
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PM says hurricane is near unbearable wound to country By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net NEARLY three weeks after Hurricane Dorian struck the northwestern Bahamas, hundreds gathered at Bahamas Faith Ministries last night to make sense of an unimaginable tragedy in typical Bahamian fashion: through prayer, praise and worship. Pastors prayed for grieving families, for emotional healing and for protection. They prayed for first responders and aid workers, for children and for provisions. They also prayed for the Haitian community, for Abaco, Grand Bahama, for the prime minister and for the congregation. Speakers gave stories of heroism during the storm and Bahamians were
encouraged to triumph, not despair. Singers and worship groups sang about trusting God. Attendees, with their hands raised, danced, cried and sang along with them. The prayer service drew a crowd full of clergymen, government officials and grieving residents. Google marked the country’s National Day of Prayer with a black ribbon on its homepage, a reminder that few countries have so captured the attention of the world in recent weeks. “The horror and tragedy of ‘one of the most powerful and destructive storms ever recorded in’ our region is a near unbearable wound, deep in the heart and the soul of our country,” Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis, pictured, said. SEE PAGE FIVE
A CHILD is held during the service last night at Bahamas Faith Ministries as part of the National Day of Prayer to mark the devastation from Hurricane Dorian. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
BISHOP BOYD CALLS FOR END NEIGHBOURS HEARD CRIES OF TO NEGATIVITY AND BLAME ‘DON’T KILL ME’ THEN SILENCE By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net AS he urged Bahamians to unite in the wake of Hurricane Dorian, Anglican Bishop Laish Boyd said animosity and blame towards Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis for reliefrelated issues is not helpful as anguish and suffering remain great. Bishop Boyd said the
most disheartening aspect of this ongoing humanitarian crisis is the negativity that has permeated almost every storm-related effort. While he conceded that some things have gone wrong as the nation grapples with this tragedy, Bishop Boyd said Dorian was an unprecedented monster storm, which happened in a country unaccustomed SEE PAGE SIX
By RIEL MAJOR Tribune Staff Reporter rmajor@tribunemedia.net THE neighbour of a man and woman found murdered in an apartment early Tuesday morning remembers hearing the two victims plead for their lives. Police were called to the apartment on Gladstone Road shortly after 4am when neighbours heard screams. Officers
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discovered the couple unresponsive with visible blunt force trauma to their bodies. Police have identified the victims as Gloria Estella Rolle, 58, of Nassau Village, and Tenneson Vaught Leslie, 39, of Gladstone Road. Leslie is originally from Jamaica, police said. The Tribune visited the apartment yesterday and SEE PAGE 12