MONDAY i’m lovin’ it!
HIGH 88ºF LOW 79ºF
The Tribune Established 1903
24/7 BREAKING NEWS ON TRIBUNE242.COM
Biggest And Best!
VOLUME:116 No.206, OCTOBER 21ST, 2019
HO US E & 16 THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
SPORT: HITMEN STOP TRUCKERS, WARRIORS SAFE
PAGES
NO BACKING DOWN ON DEPORTATIONS Govt rejects UN’s concern over new migrant expulsions By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net THE government’s decision to resume deportation of undocumented migrants was “painstaking”, but came only after careful analysis at a time deemed appropriately humane and necessary, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. While it defended the Minnis administration’s handling of the immigration situation in the wake of Hurricane Dorian, the ministry doubled down on the government’s unwavering position saying any person found in violation of the Bahamas’ Immigration Act will be dealt with
according to statute laws. While pushing back against international scrutiny and criticism levelled at the government, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said this country was one that “strictly” adhered to the rule of law, both locally and internationally. This especially pertained to the human rights of every man, woman and child on Bahamian territory, the ministry said in a statement over the weekend. The statement further reinforced the position of Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis and the Department of Immigration on how those caught breaking
PROGRESSIVE Liberal Party leader Philip “Brave” Davis has questioned whether the Royal Bahamas Defence Force’s change in leadership will impact ongoing recovery efforts on storm-ravaged islands. Not only has the change added a layer of uncertainty to the situation, but Mr Davis said government’s lack of a substantive plan shows they continue to
SEE PAGE 13
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
`THE massive oil spill in Grand Bahama caused by Hurricane Dorian should be incentive enough for the government to reject the controversial Oban refinery proposal, an environmental watchdog has asserted. Save The Bays (STB), in a pamphlet on the incident, said the 100,000 barrels of oil that spilled from the Equinor South Riding Point facility should ideally lead to a “definitive rejection of the notorious” Oban Energies proposition. STB’s Legal Director Fred Smith, QC, said the Minnis administration would be “insane” to continue “courting another dangerous and reckless facility” because if agreed to, a “disaster on the scale of South Riding
HARBOUR ISLAND PROJECT ‘UNLAWFUL’
SEE PAGE FIVE
“shoot from the hips” as it relates to Abaco and Grand Bahama in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian. Raymond King was recently appointed deputy commander of the Royal Bahamas Defence Force and is now acting as the commander of the organisation as Commodore Tellis Bethel went on three months vacation leave last week. Many observers have posed the same question as Mr Davis, noting the
‘TIME TO BIN OBAN AFTER HUGE SPILL AT REFINERY’
SEE PAGE SIX
‘WHY CHANGE RBDF TOP COMMAND NOW?’ By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net
HOME
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
MAGIC DAY OUT
MAGICIAN Edwourral Daxon enjoying himself at the International Culture, Wine and Food Festival held at the Botanical Gardens over the weekend. More coverage - Page 3. Photo: Terrel W Carey Sr/Tribune Staff
A HARBOUR Island development must make an application to the “appropriate authority” and receive the requisite approvals “in compliance with the law” if work is to ever resume on the project, a Supreme Court judge has ruled. Justice Diane Stewart, in an October 17 written ruling, ordered the marina development by 4M Harbour Island Limited to be “stayed” pending an application and its consequent lawful approval by the relevant body. SEE PAGE 13
LIKE SO MANY MISSING - SILENCE By DENISE MAYCOCK Tribune Freeport Reporter dmaycock@tribunemedia.net
IT has been seven painstaking and worrisome weeks for relatives of Tanario Lowe, an Abaco native not heard from since the day before Hurricane Dorian destroyed the island. “We don’t know what to think or what to do, or where to go from here,” his sister Godydra Gardiner
MISSING: Tanario Lowe told The Tribune yesterday. Their grief is compounded by the thought that any
remains found now would be decomposed, needing DNA analysis for identification. Relatives are also unsure of whether he chose to ride the storm out at one of Abaco’s emergency shelters or at his home in Cooper’s Town. But at this point, Ms Gardiner, 28, said they have exhausted all options, having searched shelters in Nassau. A report was SEE PAGE FIVE
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
INSIGHT
WHY CHIPMAN’S LONE VOICE MAY BE AN EXAMPLE
SEE PAGE EIGHT