09232020 NEWS AND BUSINESS

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VOLUME:117 No.207, SEPTEMBER 23RD, 2020

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

ALICIA WALLACE: IT REALLY IS GOOD TO TALK TO YOUR KIDS

POLICE SHOOTING VICTIM WANTS $2M Plain clothes officer ‘opened fire without identifying himself’ By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net A 20-YEAR-OLD man will seek $2m in damages after police shot him “without justification” in January and caused him injuries and “emotional distress”. The Tribune understands that the officers were punished following a Police Disciplinary Tribunal hearing earlier this year but remain on the Royal Bahamas Police Force. Attorney Bjorn Ferguson said he will seek $2m for his client, Theon Hall, for the violation of his constitutional rights, damages and consequential loss for personal injuries experienced, exemplary damages, aggravated damages and punitive damages.

Police Constables Stanley Cooper and Varian Clarke are listed as defendants on the writ with Police Commissioner Paul Rolle and Attorney General Carl Bethel. Mr Ferguson said yesterday: “In a democratic society agents of the state and agencies of the state cannot just abuse their powers. They are subject to the law and I think over time we have not held them fully accountable for their acts and because of that it seems to be a situation where they are very comfortable in their wrong behaviour and conduct. It’s all about accountability. They hold us accountable and we must hold them accountable.” SEE PAGE THREE

AMID calls for more diversification of the country’s economy, Finance Minister Peter Turnquest said while officials will continue to have discussions on this, it is still “unrealistic” for the country to move away from its leading tourism industry. The minister made the comments while speaking to reporters outside

Cabinet yesterday. He was responding to questions about whether the government had planned to focus more on other industries instead of relying so heavily on tourism. With the country’s tourism industry at a near halt due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many have called for a diversification strategy to reduce The Bahamas’ reliance on foreign visitors. SEE PAGE THREE

By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Nassau Cruise Port redevelopment could finish months ahead of its target, it was revealed yesterday. Mehmet Kutman, founder and chairman of Global Ports Holding, told a conference call that Nassau Cruise Port was “pushing very hard” to complete Prince George Wharf’s $224m redevelopment some two to three months ahead of the April 2022 finish target. While construction work was some 42 days behind schedule presently, Mr Kutman said an earlier finish would boost Nassau Cruise Port’s operating income and revenue margins. “Right now, we are unfortunately not ahead of schedule,” he admitted. “We are around 42 days behind schedule, but when I have spoken to our construction company they hope to finish it ahead of schedule. The reason we are behind schedule is because the country was locked down [for COVID-19], like most places, so the construction people could not get in.” FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

BAHAMIAN SHOT DEAD IN HOUSTON

‘THERE’S NO QUICK FIX’ TO REDIRECT ECONOMY By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net

PORT PROJECT ON COURSE TO FINISH EARLY

THEON HALL, who is seeking $2m in damages after being shot in January by a police officer without justification.

‘HELP ME SAVE MY BEAUTIFUL BOY’ By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net

TARA Saunders never imagined she would be fighting to raise $125,000 so her two-year-old son with a rare congenital heart defect can have surgery and live a normal life. Chavez Saunders was born with a double outlet right ventricle (DORV) and a ventricular septal defect (VSD). He has a hole in his heart.

CHAVEZ SAUNDERS “The pulmonary artery and the aorta,” his mother said, “are connected to the right side of the heart as opposed to one being

connected to the left and the other being connected to the right. Through repair surgery, we could turn one of the arteries to the left side and close the hole in his heart.” Ms Saunders, 33, does not have insurance but she said the Joe Dimaggio Children’s Hospital in Florida has agreed to discount the cost of surgery and related expenses for “roughly SEE PAGE THREE

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

A BAHAMIAN student was shot dead in Texas last week, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed yesterday. Kani Rahming was studying in Houston. According to a statement from the ministry, police in Texas responded to an incident at Lazy Hollow, Houston around 10pm on September 18 where it was discovered that Rahming had been shot in the chest. He was immediately taken to a nearby hospital where he subsequently died. SEE PAGE FIVE

TECHNOLOGY

MUSK BETTING BIG ON BETTER BATTERIES

SEE PAGE NINE


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