11012018 NEWS

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VOLUME:115 No.236, NOVEMBER 1ST, 2018

OBITS OFFICIA

CLASSIFIED TRADER: CARS, CARS, CARS & MORE CARS

INSIDE

NO CHALLENGE

Cop in unlawful killing cases fails to appeal By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net A POLICE officer found by the Coroner’s Court this year to have unlawfully killed two people in separate incidents has not appealed those rulings, drawing focus as to whether the Department of Public Prosecutions will pursue criminal action against him. The rulings sprang from two separate incidents in which Corporal Adrian Miller killed 31-year-old Girred Clarke on August 17, 2013, and 22-year-old Terrique Fowler on June 7, 2013. The 21-day deadline for him to appeal those rulings passed weeks ago and it is not clear why he did not launch an appeal.

Yesterday, Director of Public Prosecutions Garvin Gaskins said his department will not press charges against him in connection with one of the matters, the death of Clarke, who was shot at a party. “With respect to one of the matters, certainly from our vantage point it doesn’t speak to a cogent case of homicide,” Mr Gaskins said. “The other one, I haven’t gotten anything (from the Coroner’s Court), so I don’t want to speak to that.” Clarke, 31, got into an argument at a party hosted by family and friends when he fired two shots into the air with a .45 Glock pistol and one shot at a fleeing car. Cpl Miller responded to the scene.

By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net THE Public Hospitals Authority called it “reprehensible” yesterday that the Bahamas Nurses Union would admit to “deception” during negotiations in 2014 that led to an agreement for a now disputed shift change, insisting it remains resolute in implementing a five on/two off shift. The PHA released the statement last night following a Tribune report where the BNU’s former president, Jannah Khalfani,

admitted she signed the shift change agreement on behalf of the BNU though she knew the agreement would not be binding. Ms Khalfani told this newspaper the agreement was signed when the BNU and the Ministry of Health were negotiating a contract for Department of Public Health nurses. She said because then PHA managing director Herbert Brown pressured the union to consider a nurses shift, she signed the document to pacify him. SEE PAGE FIVE

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4C’S OWNER AND CAPTAIN GIVEN BAIL By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net

4C’s ADVENTURES owner Clayton Smith and one of his tour boat captains, Roderick Watson, were granted bail by a Supreme Court judge before their trial in which they are accused of negligently causing the death of an American woman and injuring nine other people when the boat they were chartering burst into flames earlier this year. Attorney Nicholas Mitchell confirmed to The Tribune that Justice Renae McKay granted both Exuma natives $10,000 bail each with two sureties yesterday afternoon concerning the deadly explosion in waters off Barratarre, Exuma on June 30.

INSURERS WARN HEALTH LEVY WON’T BE ENOUGH By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

I’LL PUT A SPELL ON YOU 100 Jamz held a Halloween trick or treat event yesterday - complete with sweets, treats and screams for all the young ghosts and goblins who called by Radio House. Jamz DJ JJ is pictured bringing a little magic to the event for one visitor. See page two for more. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff

WHERE’S EASIER TO DO BUSINESS - BAHAMAS OR THE GAZA STRIP? By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

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PHA BLASTS UNION ON SHIFT DEAL SIGNING

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THE Deputy Prime Minister yesterday pledged “drastic improvement” after the World Bank concluded it was easier to do business in the war-torn West Bank and Gaza Strip than The Bahamas. Peter Turnquest MP told Tribune Business that planned reforms to the Government’s processes

and interaction with the private sector, driven by the increasing use of technology, would warrant “a significant upgrade” to The Bahamas’ 118th spot in the World Bank’s “ease of doing business” index. While that represented an improvement of just one spot from last year’s 119th position, the World Bank still put The Bahamas two places behind the 116thranked West Bank and Gaza Strip - the Palestinian

territories regularly subjected to bombardments, economic blockades and lengthy power outages as a result of conflict with Israel. Mr Turnquest, though, said The Bahamas was frequently “short changed” by assessments from the World Bank and other international agencies, which often failed to account for improvements and reforms enacted by this nation. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

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Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

BAHAMIAN insurers yesterday warned the $1,000 annual premium for National Health Insurance’s basic package may “grossly underestimate” the true cost of the scheme’s benefits. The Bahamas Insurance Association (BIA), releasing the industry’s “position paper” on the government’s revised NHI model, called for data and empirical studies that showed how it determined the scheme’s costs and employer/ employee contributions. In particular, it questioned how it could set a $1,000 annual premium for NHI’s Standard Health Benefit, the minimum level of coverage, when the NHI Authority had yet to agree the fees that doctors and other healthcare providers will charge. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

DIANE PHILLIPS: WHOSE IDEA WAS IT ANYWAY?

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