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FNM: Nothing to hide over China L! ADS SEL PHOTO 351 002 / 502-2
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ORGANISER OF MARCH ‘QUIZZED BY POLICE’
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net AS momentum builds on social media for a “Black Friday� protest, lead organiser and community activist Ranard Henfield yesterday raised alarms that his efforts have put him under the scrutiny of the police. Mr Henfield claimed that he was approached by SEE PAGE SIX
MPs unmoved by PM’s threat to reveal talks By KHRSNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net  SENIOR Free National Movement members yesterday insisted that they were not concerned or moved by Prime Minister Perry Christie’s threat to reveal documents detailing the previous FNM administration’s efforts to partner with the Chinese for agriculture and fisheries developments, saying this was a mere deflection away from the failures of the Progressive Liberal Party government. FNM Deputy Leader Peter Turnquest and Long Island MP Loretta ButlerTurner said the troubling
concern for many Bahamians is the Christie administration’s affinity for conducting business in “secret�. While both MPs acknowledged that Chinese investors were engaged in major projects during FNM terms in office including Baha Mar and Hutchinson Whampoa for the revival of Grand Bahama’s economy in 1992 and 1993, they maintained that these dealings were done in a transparent manner. This, Mr Turnquest said, was a major difference between the current PLP administration and the then Ingraham led government. SEE PAGE SIX
SEARS SEEKS TRANSPARENCY IN GOVT’S FOREIGN DEALINGS By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
PROGRESSIVE Liberal Party Fort Charlotte candidate Alfred Sears called yesterday for more transparency from the government concerning its dealings with China and other countries. The Christie administration has faced a barrage of criticism following revelations of its consideration of various business ventures involving the Chinese, including its granting of an “approval in principle� to a company, Caribbean Global Timber Limited (CGTL),
for a forestry project on 4,500 acres of land in North Andros. Environment Minister Kenred Dorsett has said that no license has been issued to the company because it has not met all the conditions necessary to obtain them. It has been reported that the majority of CGTL’s directors are Chinese, however Mr Dorsett said on Monday that the principals of the company include Bahamian and American citizens who have sought additional assistance from a Chinese industrial and commercial SEE PAGE SIX
AMERICA LOOKS TO TRUMP
DONALD Trump was edging closer to victory in the US elections last night in a tight race, with several states still to call in the early hours of the morning. Upsetting the pre-election polls, the Republicandidate, pictured above with his wife, Melania, surged ahead of Democrat rival Hillary Clinton and established a lead that saw him move towards the 270 electoral college votes needed to secure the presidency. At the time of going to press, he stood at 264 votes compared to Clinton’s total of 215 - and ahead in counting in Wisconsin, Michigan and Arizona. SEE PAGE 12
THE ELECTION party at the US Embassy in Nassau last night, including ChargÊ d’Affaires Lisa Johnson, second from right.
ACTIVISTS’ CLAIM OF BEING ‘MARIJUANA BROWNIES’ IN FEAR FOR LIVES UPHELD PUT STUDENTS IN HOSPITAL A CLAIM by five Bahamians that their lives are in danger because of their political advocacy and that some of them have had to flee the country has been firmly upheld by a leading international human rights authority. A petition made on behalf of Fred Smith, Francisco Nunez, Joseph Darville, Kirkland Bodie and Romauld Ferreira by the Grand Bahama Hu-
man Rights Association (GBHRA) last month asked that the Inter American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) request that the Bahamas government adopt precautionary measures to prevent irreparable harm to their lives. The IACHR found that the five members of Save The Bays are in “a serious and urgent situation since SEE PAGE FIVE
By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net  FIVE students from Doris Johnson High School were rushed to hospital last week after they allegedly ate “marijuana brownies� while on campus, police said. Officer-in-charge of the Drug Enforcement Unit (DEU) Superintendent Samuel Butler said he could
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not confirm or deny what the teens ingested or if it was an illegal substance, but said his team is awaiting the results of “chemical analysis� from the Princess Margaret Hospital to determine the next move. He said the students told his officers that they were given the brownies by a classmate and “got sick� a few minutes later. SEE PAGE THREE