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BPL RESUMES DISCONNECTIONS AFTER DELAY FOR STORM RELIEF
BY SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net  BAHAMAS Power and Light has resumed disconnections of past due accounts, Corporate Communications Manager Arnette Ingraham confirmed yesterday. However, Mrs Ingraham said the company is only “disconnecting accounts SEE PAGE SIX
Police ‘are the only gang that matters’ BY SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net  DESPITE recording three murders and several “serious� shooting incidents in 48 hours, Officerin-Charge of the Central Detective Unit, Chief Superintendent Clayton Fernander said the public has “no need to be afraid�. In an interview with The Tribune, Chief Supt Fernander responded to messages on social media that warned Bahamians to stay inside their homes this weekend, because a “gang war� had erupted. Chief Supt Fernander said the entire country is in “safe hands� and the only gang that matters is the Royal Bahamas Police Force (RBPF). The rumours began af-
ter a woman was killed and two people, a woman and a man, were hospitalised following a drive by shooting at the Sand Trap off West Bay Street around 8pm on Monday. The shooting took the country’s murder count to 90 for the year and was the third homicide since Sunday. Chief Supt Fernander said police do not have a motive for the killing at this time, but said they do not believe the women victims were the intended targets, but were simply in the “wrong place at the wrong time�. The male victim from Monday night’s shooting, according to Chief Supt Fernander is “very well known� to police. SEE PAGE SIX
JAH CURE IN COURT OVER FIGHT - BUT ACCUSATION IS DROPPED By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net
JAMAICAN reggae star Jah Cure found himself in the Magistrate’s Court yesterday accused of committing a misdemeanour that stemmed from an argument that was captured on video and shared thousands of times on social media. The singer, 39, whose real name is Siccature Alcock, appeared before Magistrate Samuel McKinney
alongside his 26-year-old countryman Terefe Mason to face a single charge of “fighting in a public place� in an incident at Paradise Island on Sunday, November 13. A third named accused, 22-year-old Bahamian national Trevor Thompson, was not present at the arraignment. However, the singer was later discharged of the offence. SEE PAGE SIX
JEFF Lloyd speaking last night at his ratification for the FNM, alongside fellow candidates Renward Wells and Reuben Rahming. Photo: Yontalay Bowe
ENERGY PLAN REVEALED PINEWOOD FNMS OBJECT AS CANDIDATES RATIFIED TO CHOICE OF RAHMING By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net
WHILE officially launching three of his party’s final six New Providence candidates last night, Free National Movement Leader Dr Hubert Minnis revealed his plans to tackle energy reform in the country through the implementation of a national solar power initiative. This programme, he told scores of party supporters, will not only remedy the high cost of electricity, but will allow customers
to receive money or credit toward account balances from electricity provider Bahamas Power and Light (BPL). The initiative also aims to create much needed jobs in an economy where unemployment remains at unsavoury levels, Dr Minnis said. He further repeated plans to stop, review and cancel any secret deals the party discovers that hands over the Bahamas’ precious natural resources to foreign interests. SEE PAGE TEN
By KHRISNA VIRGIL Deputy Chief Reporter kvirgil@tribunemedia.net
THE Free National Movement’s Pinewood Gardens Constituency Association has branded the party “deceitful� and “disrespectful� amid accusations that FNM Leader Dr Hubert Minnis broke assurances of support for talk show host Lincoln Bain as the party’s standard-bearer for this seat and chose Reuben Rahming, as the candidate for the 2017 general election. While the party was in
the process of organising its candidate’s launch last night, where Mr Rahming was officially ratified, executives of the association were drafting a stinging critism of Dr Minnis and rejecting the new candidate. And in the strongest form of dismissal, several of the constituency association’s members attended last night’s event donning florescent orange signs and placards in support of Mr Bain and bashing Dr Minnis. SEE PAGE TWO
TURNQUEST: BOUNDARY CHANGES ‘A WASTE OF TIME’ By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
FORMER National Security Minister Tommy Turnquest yesterday called potential changes to the boundary lines a “waste of time�, taking aim at suggestions of an increase in constituencies ahead of the 2017 general election.
Mr Turnquest, the minister with responsibility for elections in the last Ingraham administration and a two-time member of the Constituencies Commission, said there was not enough statistical data to justify any changes given the low voter registration numbers. Reflecting on the issue of gerrymandering, however, he ultimately
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expressed confidence in the independence of the commission’s Vice-Chair Justice Stephen Isaacs. “When it’s time for you to go, you can do whatever nonsense you want – no chance trying to fool around with the constituency line,� Mr Turnquest said when contacted by The Tribune. SEE PAGE THREE