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Volume: 119 No.240, November 8, 2022
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EVACUATE
Coastal residents in GB and Abaco told...
• Vulnerable urged to get to safety • Schools and govt offices closed from noon today • Abaco and GB prepare for the worst • Call to ‘move inland’ from West End and East End By LETRE SWEETING lsweeting@tribunemedia.net WITH Grand Bahama and Abaco projected to take a “direct hit” from Subtropical Storm Nicole, Acting Prime Minister Chester Cooper urged residents in low lying areas and those in compromised structures to evacuate. He said law enforcement officials will be providing evacuation assistance before the storm, but stressed that once conditions deteriorate, emergency responders will be “constrained” to provide help until the all clear is given. Forecasters predict
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the storm will pass directly over Grand Bahama, with Abaco poised to feel harsh impacts of the system as well. The two islands are still reeling from the devastation Hurricane Dorian brought in 2019. Nicole is expected to strengthen into category one hurricane by
Wednesday, however last night a Department of Meteorology forecaster said the storm should be out of the country and in the vicinity of Florida at that point. However, officials stress that storms rapidly intensify and change, adding the threat should not be
SEE PAGES TWO & THREE ACTING Prime Minister Chester Cooper at yesterday’s press conference.
REMINDER OF HORRORS OF DORIAN ABACO and Grand Bahama residents were preparing for the worst and stocking up emergency supplies as news of approaching Subtropical Storm Nicole brought eerie reminders of the horrors of Hurricane Dorian, which brought devastation to both islands in 2019. According to forecasters yesterday, Nicole is expected to affect Grand
Bahama as a category one hurricane on Wednesday, while bringing tropical storm force winds to Abaco. North Abaco Chief Councillor D’Angelo Edgecombe said yesterday many residents feared that Nicole would be another dramatic experience, similar to Hurricane Dorian. The anxiety led residents to pile up at gas stations and food stores in an effort to prepare for Nicole’s arrival.
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net CHINA Construction America (CCA) paid $2.4m to a company run by the son of Sir Baltron Bethel, senior policy adviser and lead Baha Mar negotiator for Perry Christie, when the dispute over the mega resort was at its peak. The payments to Notarc Management Group, whose chief executive is Leslie Bethel, are revealed in documents filed last Friday with the New York Supreme Court as the multi-billion dollar legal battle between CCA and Baha Mar’s original developer, Sarkis Izmirlian, resumed with a vengeance. Both Sir Baltron and his son yesterday denied that CCA’s payments to Notarc Management Group influenced the former’s stance towards the dispute and its participants, or his advice to the Government and its actions, after Mr Izmirlian filed for a Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in summer 2015. That move ultimately proved futile and led to his ouster as the $4.2bn project’s developer. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
‘I TOLD YOU SO’ AS GRAND LUCAYAN DEAL COLLAPSES
taken lightly. Abaco is expected to begin feeling tropical storm winds this evening, with Grand Bahama to feel tropical storm impacts beginning at 11pm tonight. Tropical storm conditions in the Berry Islands are expected
By JADE RUSSELL jrussell@tribunemedia.net
CCA PAID $2.4M TO PM ADVISOR’S SON’S FIRM DURING BAHA MAR DISPUTE
Mr Edgecombe said residents were preparing and monitoring the storm, as many still were struggling to recover from Dorian. When asked how residents were handling the anticipation, he said: “It’s a mix of feelings, some folks you know see that it’s a category one. But I heard someone say well God forbid, Dorian started out the same way and in no time it progressed. So definitely we don’t want that.” SEE PAGE TWO
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Grand Lucayan’s former chairman, Michael Scott, last night said “I told you so” after the government admitted the resort’s $100m sale has collapsed and it is now seeking an alternative purchaser. Mr Scott, who headed Lucayan Renewal Holdings under the former Minnis administration, told Tribune Business he had been informed several weeks ago that the deal with Electra America Hospitality Group was in trouble as its current board begins “active discussions” with an unnamed replacement. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS