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The Tribune
Volume:116 No.191, SEPTEMBER 27TH, 2019
Established 1903
Weekend
WEEKEND: ARTIST UNVEILS KALEIDOSCOPIC VISION
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1 art books film fashion
Weekend
Gibson ‘urged man to pay him $300k’ FORMER PLP Labour Minister Shane Gibson took “advantage” of a businessman by encouraging the man to pay him over $300,000 to ensure the contractor would be paid for hurricane clean-up efforts, a Crown attorney claimed yesterday. James Guthrie, QC, said Gibson solicited $330,000 from contractor Jonathan
Friday, September 27, 2019
history puzzles theatr e COOKING WITH HOT SAUCE Page 7
Into the kaleidoscope
Artist’s multiplicity of visio n
Court told minister ‘took advantage’ of businessman By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
music food gardening
pages 14 & 15
DIANE PHILLIPS: MUDD SHOWS TWO SIDES TO EVERY STORY
SEE PAGE TEN
HURRICANE DEATH TOLL REACHES 56
By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net
THE Hurricane Dorian death toll has increased to 56 and Royal Bahamas Police Force officials have again urged people to report missing relatives to the Central Detective Unit. So far, there have been nine deceased victims recovered in Grand Bahama and 47 in Abaco. On Tuesday, officials said there were 54 deaths associated with SEE PAGE THREE
TORMENTED BY MEMORIES OF THE STORM By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net
Ash over three months in 2017 in exchange for him using his government position to ensure Ash would be paid the $1m plus he was owed by the government in the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew. Mr Guthrie conceded that as Mr Ash was involved in making the various payments, it is fair to assert that he partook in the criminal acts. However, Mr Guthrie said it was Gibson who SEE PAGE SIX
SHANE Gibson outside court earlier this week. Photo: Terrel W Carey Sr/Tribune Staff
NIGHTS are the worst for Lavario Pinder. Each time the 37-yearold closes his eyes he sees destruction and corpses drifting in dangerously high and rising waters brought by Hurricane Dorian. “I try to stay strong and not think about all the horrible things I’ve seen. Some other people wouldn’t be able to handle that,” he told The Tribune yesterday, from a bench behind the Fox Hill Community Centre where he’s been staying for the past three weeks. SEE PAGE TWO
RAGGED ISLANDERS FEAR BEING PUSHED ASIDE AFTER DORIAN By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
RAGGED Island residents were feeling neglected even before Hurricane Dorian ravaged Grand Bahama and Abaco. Now with attention fixed on restoring the country’s second and third
largest island economies, residents of Ragged Island feel despair, fearing their wait for basic services like healthcare and public education will be pushed aside indefinitely. The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) designated their island “uninhabitable” after Hurricane Irma in 2017 and
has not lifted that tag since. The consequences of this can be severe for the 60 or so residents living there, with one family finding this year that when the health of their patriarch deteriorated, emergency medical airlift wasn’t available because of the absence of a doctor on the island. SEE PAGE FIVE
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
A COMIC’S VIEW: FERREIRA GETS MY GOAT
SEE PAGE EIGHT