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Miller predicts most PLP MPs will be ‘gone’ after election By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net TALL PINES MP Leslie Miller said yesterday he believes most of his parliamentary colleagues will be “gone� after next year’s general election. Mr Miller also said this will be an “extremely tough� election for the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) and predicted there will be “massive changes� in the House of Assembly after the 2017 vote. In an interview with The Tribune, Mr Miller said people are angry and frustrated and “will demand change� when they head to the polls. He said the expected “mass exodus� of current parliamentarians will not be about what the Free National Movement has to offer but a reflection of “how bad� people be-
lieve the Progressive Liberal Party has been in office. Mr Miller admitted that the government could have done more to assist the public during tough economic times but said the FNM is no better and has not offered any alternative solutions. “This election is the most crucial election since 1967 and will take us into a new future,� Mr Miller, who served as minister of trade and industry in the first Christie administration, said. “This will not be easy and we cannot take anything for granted. The people are upset, the people want change, they don’t care about Dr Minnis and the FNM, people vote governments out because their hate for that group exceeds their dislike for the other guy. SEE PAGE THREE
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
100 YEARS YOUNG FOR CECELIA
DR JAMES JOHNSON to disregard recommendations on the appointment of two foreign doctors. SEE PAGE SIX
By DENISE MAYCOCK Tribune Freeport Reporter dmaycock@tribunemedia.net A HARBOUR employee was found murdered in his apartment in Freeport on Tuesday morning after he did not show up to work. The victim, Dwayne Jackson, a courier employed at the Freeport Harbour, was found stabbed to death shortly before 11am inside his unit at the Maxim Court Apartments, off Ponce de Leon Drive. The Tribune understands that a female co-worker, who had gone to check on Jackson after he did not report to work, saw blood seeping from underneath the apartment’s door and alerted the police. This latest incident pushes Grand Bahama’s murder count to 16 and is the 94th homicide for the country this year, according to The Tribune’s records. SEE PAGE THREE
MINNIS: BTC PROBE JUST A DISTRACTION BY GOVERNMENT
HOSPITAL CHIEF OF STAFF QUITS AMID FIGHT ON DOCTORS’ PAY THE shock resignation of the Princess Margaret Hospital’s medical chief of staff yesterday is symptomatic of deeper discord between public health administrators and physicians, according to the Consultant Physicians Staff Association (CPSA) . Just four months into his second term, MCS Dr James Johnson resigned with immediate effect after reaching an impasse with the Public Hospitals Authority over its decision
HARBOUR WORKER FOUND STABBED DEAD IN HIS HOME
CECELIA Smith celebrated her 100th birthday with family and friends at St Joseph’s Day Care Centre yesterday. See page two for more. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
UNIONS CALL ON WORKERS TO SUPPORT BLACK FRIDAY MARCH By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
THE country’s two umbrella unions yesterday put their support behind the upcoming “Black Friday� protest, calling for Bahamians and workers throughout The Bahamas to come out and “display their displeasure� in the country’s cur-
rent state of affairs. Trade Union Congress (TUC) President Obie Ferguson, along with National Congress of Trade Unions Bahamas (NCTUB) President John Pinder, who is also the president of the Bahamas Public Service Union (BPSU), called on workers to “make an effort� to be a part of the march in order to “demonstrate your
rights as a Bahamian.� The two union leaders made their statements during a press conference in Rawson Square, which was attended by a number of representatives of various civic, religious, and environmental groups who put their support behind the upcoming march. SEE PAGE SIX
coming soon to Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net  FREE National Movement Leader Dr Hubert Minnis said yesterday that the government’s probe into the sale of the Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC) to Cable and Wireless (CWC) is nothing more than “distraction� from the country’s real issues. In an interview with The Tribune, Dr Minnis said the government is using this probe to divert the public’s attention away from a proposed $2.1 billion agri-fisheries venture with Chinese investors. SEE PAGE SIX
ALLEN: URBAN RENEWAL LOANS BETTER LATE THAN NEVER
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net THE impact of the government’s “11th hour� bid to institutionalise the Urban Renewal 2.0 programme will not be fully realised until next term, according to Urban Renewal Commission Co-Chair Algernon Allen. Just months away from a general election, Mr Allen acknowledged that the optics of the government’s tabling of the Urban Renewal Authority Bill, which will empower the proposed statutory body to grant loans, SEE PAGE SIX
November 25th 2016