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VOLUME:115 No.210, SEPTEMBER 24TH, 2018
HO US E & 16 THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
SPORTS: THE TIGER ROARS AGAIN PAGES
Disney’s plan ‘no cause for alarm’ Boss insists Lighthouse Point project protects and brings 150 jobs By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net DISNEY Cruise Line’s proposal for Lighthouse Point intends to develop approximately 20 percent of the 700-acre privatelyowned property, according to its president Jeff Vahle, who said the mega-operator would create up to 150 permanent jobs for Bahamians. Mr Vahle underscored plans to give more than 170 acres back to the government for conservation, and preserve more than 100 acres of salt ponds on the property as he defended
the cruise line’s interests in what has been largely a public relations fight with environmentalists. He insisted Disney’s proposal would employ sustainable design and building practices, adding Bahamians would have full access to the property. “…Our plan will create 120 to 150 permanent, quality employment opportunities, encompassing a breadth of disciplines, as well as management positions and opportunities for career advancement,” Mr Vahle wrote in an op-ed piece. INSIGHT: PAGE NINE
JASMINE SETS HER SIGHTS ON THE WORLD
ENVIRONMENTAL activists are seeking a Supreme Court order to have Nygard Cay sold to satisfy the $2.2m debt Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard owes in legal costs from illegal dredging activities. Court documents obtained by The Tribune show how Save The Bays, formerly the Coalition to
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net TRAFFIC police are investigating the circumstances surrounding a hit-and-run traffic fatality that occurred on the Tonique Williams-Darling highway. The death of Friday’s victim, a man, pushed 2018’s traffic death toll to 56. According to reports, a man was attempting to cross the highway near a business establishment shortly after 11pm, when he was struck by a red Suzuki car travelling in the east bound lane. The driver of the vehicle did not remain at the scene. SEE PAGE 13
By MORGAN ADDERLEY Tribune Staff Reporter madderley@tribunemedia.net
THE Public Hospitals Authority has disclosed that the raising of salaries and benefits of medical personnel is “simply not sustainable at this time”, in the wake of last week’s demonstrations by healthcare unions over such outstanding issues. In a press conference held Friday, PHA Managing Director Catherine Weech provided a breakdown of the organisation’s finances, noting 80 percent of PHA’s income is currently related to the salaries and benefits of physicians, SEE PAGE TWO
LEGAL DEBTS COULD FORCE NYGARD SALE Protect Clifton Bay, is going after the $2,245,928.22 owed to them, as well as any accrued interest. According to the documents, Nygard owes the Coalition $1,628,481.87 in costs on a full indemnity, solicitor and own client basis after Justice Rhonda Bain found him guilty of breaching a 2013 injunction preventing him from engaging in dredging activities at his Simms Point property. SEE PAGE THREE
HIT AND RUN DRIVER LEFT VICTIM TO DIE IN ROAD
DOCTORS WARNED: THERE’S NO NEW MONEY
INSIGHT
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
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JASMINE RUSSELL, right, won gold at the Ocean State Judo Championships - putting her in perfect position for the World Juniors championships to be held in Nassau on October 17-21. Also excelling for The Bahamas team was Mya Beneby, earning silver, pictured left. See Sports for the full story.
SUSPECT SHOT DEAD ‘POINTED GUN AT POLICE’ By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
A 22-YEAR-OLD shot and killed by police in the Nassau Village community two years ago was not the person they were seeking to apprehend, according to police testimony on Friday. Detective Sergeant Dwayne Delancy said officers were actually seeking to arrest wanted suspect Nathaniel Miller at the time they fatally shot Osworth Rolle
A MILLENIUM G2 9mm pistol similar to one said to be recovered by Det Sgt Mario Darrell. Jr on November 30, 2016. Det Sgt Delancy said both Rolle and Miller pointed guns at three
officers as they confronted the two men and several others in a yard on Lee Street, which prompted officers to open fire. However, a test of the firearm alleged to be the one Rolle pointed at officers yielded negative fingerprint results, while Miller’s alleged firearm was never recovered. Taking the witness stand before Her Majesty’s Coroner Jeanine Weech-Gomez,
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
SEE PAGE FIVE
LONGLINE FISHING ‘MUST NOT BE ALLOWED’
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
THE Bahamas National Trust is strongly opposed to the introduction of longline fishing within the country’s economic exclusive zone - a destructive practice it warned that could change the Bahamian way of life forever. BNT Director of Science and Policy Shelley Cant Woodside explained that while the Trust was open to exploring the possibility SEE PAGE 12