10152021 NEWS AND BUSINESS

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Volume: 118 No.223, October 15, 2021

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A NEW DAY - BUT WITH OLD FACES

Cabinet decision to hire retirees defended amid ‘double dipping’ claim By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net THE Office of the Prime Minister has defended Cabinet’s decision to allow re-engaged retirees to receive a salary and their pension, saying the process will be selective, meritbased and infrequent. Two retired civil servants have already been re-engaged, the OPM said in a statement. The statement came after The Tribune reported that Cabinet, according to a leaked memo, has changed the official policy of the

Minnis administration that prevented returning retirees from receiving a salary and a pension. “As we transition into government, the Davis administration, like many administrations which preceded it, has decided to re-engage two former senior public officials out of retirement,” the OPM said. “Their expertise and long years of experience in the public sector are invaluable in guiding us through the kind of systemic changes which we have promised to deliver for the Bahamian people. SEE PAGE THREE

DARVILLE BLAMES MINNIS FOR VACCINE SHORTFALL By TANYA SMITHCARTWRIGHT tsmith-cartwright@ tribunemedia.net

AFTER urging the government to implement more restrictive measures to curtail COVID-19, former Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis has come under heavy fire from Health and Wellness Minister Dr Michael Darville who said his “poor management

INSIDE TODAY

of the pandemic is public record”. Dr Darville said the Free National Movement should have been actively working to secure additional vaccine supplies before it was voted out of office in September and reminded the public that Dr Minnis called a snap election in the “middle of the strongest” COVID19 surge. SEE PAGE FOUR

NAUGHTY: VACCINE RUSH FOR BLACK FRIDAY SALES

- SEE PAGE EIGHT

APPEAL PLAN OVER INVALID INDICTMENTS

By FARRAH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter fjohnson@tribunemedia.net THE Department of Public Prosecutions intends to appeal a Supreme Court’s judge’s ruling that states that a rape accused’s voluntary bill of indictment was not valid as it was signed by an African prosecutor who was rejected for practice at the Bahamas Bar. Last week, Justice Deborah Fraser delivered her decision after attorney David Cash challenged the validity of his client’s VBI. SEE PAGE SEVEN

‘MAKE ABACO A SECOND FREEPORT’

SAVED FROM THE STORM

By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

WHEN Hurricane Dorian battered Grand Bahama, East End resident Maydon Cooper Swann, left, found her wedding dress after the storm covered in dirt, torn and tattered. Yesterday, she was reunited with the dress, restored and, as she said, “snow white”. Read the full story on PAGE FIVE.

DAVIS: 150 HOMES FOR ABACO UNDER REVIEW By KHRISNA RUSSELL Tribune Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis promised his government will bring change to storm ravaged Abaco and said a plan to rebuild 150 homes on the island is under review. Speaking at the 17th annual Abaco Business Outlook yesterday, Mr Davis said the previous administration neglected Abaco and Grand Bahama

PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis. in the two years since Hurricane Dorian ravaged those islands.

He said his government is committed to bringing change and thanked Abaco residents for electing both of the Progressive Liberal Party’s candidates to represent them. He said the government has extended the Special Economic Recovery Zone Order, which will allow those impacted by Hurricane Dorian to import vehicles duty free, no matter where they currently reside. SEE PAGE THREE

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

ABACO’S Chamber of Commerce president, Ken Hutton, yesterday called for the Dorian-ravaged island to be designated as a ‘second Freeport’ with the creation of an Abaco Special Economic Zone to further spur its recovery from the devastating storm. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

EDITOR’S NOTE

DUE TO CIRCUMSTANCES BEYOND OUR CONTROL, THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF TODAY’S TRIBUNE COULD NOT BE PRINTED. HOWEVER, THE SECTION WILL STILL APPEAR ONLINE AT WWW. TRIBUNE242.COM.

OUR APOLOGIES FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE.


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