11102017%20news

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The Tribune Established 1903

Volume:114 No.244, NOVEMBER 10TH, 2017

Weekend

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

WEEKEND: RESORT OFFERS HAVEN FOR PLUS-SIZE TOURISTS

‘Stand easy - arms deal’s above board’ By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net

MINISTER of National Security Marvin Dames yesterday expressed confidence in operations at the Royal Bahamas Defence Force (RBDF) as he moved to clarify several discrepancies in Auditor General Terrence Bastian’s report into the law enforcement agency. The report covers the period July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2015, and found that a 2014 procurement exercise posed a threat to the safety and security of Bahamian borders by awarding a $1.3 million contract to a homebased company that did not have the necessary approvals to import weapons from the commissioner of police. “This is not a company that was pulled out of a hat,” Mr Dames said when contacted yesterday. “You just can’t go to the US and say I want to buy a

shipment of guns, it doesn’t work that way. There are any number of external and internal layers that prevent anyone from just walking off the streets and saying give me a shipment of guns, I want to send it to another country. We’re in the business of law enforcement, there are a lot of companies that we deal with that are subjected to the toughest scrutiny because of what they deal in.” Mr Dames said: “The commodore had said to me that the company, according to their records, is a legitimate company. It’s not the first time they’ve done business with them. “I’m not too concerned that it’s a home-based business,” he continued. “Sometimes we have to be careful when we look at these reports that we don’t draw a conclusion that the weapons are missing, the weapons are actually not missing.”

FORMER Bahamas Public Service Union (BPSU) President John Pinder said yesterday the more than $700,000 paid out to Royal Bahamas Defence Force (RBDF) officers in 2014 was not “wrongly paid out” as indicated by the Office of the Auditor General.

By KHRISNA RUSSELL Deputy Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net BPL chairwoman Darnell Osborne said yesterday officials are in the process of “tightening” and “centralising” how contracts are awarded at the power company. SEE PAGE SIX

MANAGE OUR CRUISE PORT - IT NEEDS $100M UPGRADE

SEE PAGE THREE

$700K TO OFFICERS ‘WAS NO MISTAKE’ By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net

BPL ACTS TO TIGHTEN CONTRACT PROCESS

In fact, Mr Pinder said the “lump sum payments” were intentional as it is common practice for all members of the disciplined forces “to get whatever money is negotiated” by the BPSU on behalf of its members. Yesterday, The Tribune reported more than $700,000 was wrongly paid out to 1,227 RBDF officers in 2014. SEE PAGE THREE

CRUISE ships in port at Nassau. The management of the cruise port will be put out to bid by mid-December, with the facility needing a “substantial capital infusion in excess of $100m”. See Business for the full story. Photo: Captain-tucker/Wikimedia

LEGAL MARIJUANA? NO TIME SOON SANDS: BE By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net

HEALTH Minister Dr Duane Sands said yesterday the government is monitoring global trends in the decriminalisation and legalisation of marijuana, but doubted the Bahamas would “follow suit” in the immediate future. However, in addressing the matter from both a personal and a professional standpoint, Dr

Sands in an interview with The Tribune contended the Minnis administration would be “objective and open-minded” in its discussions on the issue. This comes on the heels of National Security Minister Marvin Dames’ suggestion the Bahamas should consider decriminalising marijuana “at some point”. Dr Sands said while there are many people who would advocate for the outright legalisation

of marijuana, there needs to be a proper discourse on all the pros and cons related to the topic. “Let’s watch how this thing play out and let’s pay attention to the pros and cons,” he told The Tribune. “We have agreed that we are going to participate in the activities of CARICOM who has started to get the evidence of medical marijuana and we will participate in that discussion.”

SEE PAGE SIX

LICKETY LICKED IN JOBS BATTLE By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A LICKETY Split employee, whose husband conducted a year-long harassment campaign against her boss over suspicions they were having an affair, has won her claim for unfair dismissal.

Justice Indra Charles, in a September 14, 2017, ruling found that the ice cream/ deli business and its managing director, Llewellyn Burrows, “don’t have a leg to stand on” over the dismissal of former manager, Sharmean Woodside. Recording that several “volte faces” were

performed over the rationale for Ms Woodside’s dismissal, the Supreme Court warned Bahamian employers that they needed to be “decisive” when terminating employees and not later “go fishing for other grounds to justify the real reason”. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

HONEST ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net

BAHAMIANS need to lift the veil of secrecy surrounding crimes against women and children, Minister of Health Dr Duane Sands urged yesterday, as he noted linkages of such acts to violence in school and the wider community. Dr Sands spoke at a symposium on preventing violent crimes hosted by the Crisis Centre. According to organisers of the event, the prevention and eradication of violent crime in the Bahamas is predicated on the establishment of functioning links between essential services and experts. SEE PAGE SEVEN


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