HOUSE & HOME MONDAY
HIGH 81ºF LOW 73ºF
CARS! CARS!
The Tribune
CLASSIFIEDS TRADER
Established 1903
L AT E S T
N E W S
O N
T R I B U N E 2 4 2 . C O M
Biggest And Best!
Volume: 121 No.15, December 11, 2023
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: PRICE–$1
UN REPORTS ON DETENTION FLAWS Forced confessions and prison problems among issues noted by group By EARYEL BOWLEG Tribune Staff Reporter ebowleg@tribunemedia.net THE United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) offered a searing assessment of the country’s detention systems, finding numerous faults relating to how the criminal justice system treats people deprived of their liberty.
The WGAD found the country is not doing enough to ensure forced confessions to crimes are not impeding people’s right to a fair trial. The body said people are too often arrested without a warrant, and arrests are sometimes based on outdated or expired warrants. Contrary to the law, SEE PAGE THREE
‘Notable iNequality’ as some families uNable to afford bail By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune News Editor rrolle@tribunemedia.net A UNITED Nations group is concerned that some families in The Bahamas cannot afford to pay for bail, creating inequality regarding access to bail. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention released its preliminary
report on Friday. “The Working Group concludes that in many cases suspects are detained pending trial as their families are unable to pay the bail,” the report said. “Examples varied from a mother of several children whose husband was unable to pay the bail to a young SEE PAGE THREE
Don’t Blink - The Bahamas with back-to-back wins NEWLY crowned home run champion Breyias Dean in centre is surrounded by Don’t Blink Home Run Derby in Paradise organizers Todd Isaacs Jr at left and Lucius Fox at right. Dean was the second consecutive Bahamian to win the title in the six-year history of the tournament held in Montagu Bay on Saturday. He follows in the footsteps of last year’s champion BJ Murray Jr, who was eliminated in the preliminary rounds. See Sports section PAGE 14 for story. Photo: Dante Carrer
WSC ‘very inhumane’ to disconnect uteb calls for Abaco customers on bills since Dorian traNspareNcy oVer btVi picK for presideNt By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
FURIOUS Abaco residents yesterday slammed the Water & Sewerage Corporation’s move to launch mass pre-Christmas disconnections
over bills dating back four years to Hurricane Dorian as “very inhumane”. Lydia Higgs, an Abaco realtor and property manager, told Tribune Business that many locals, second home owners and vacation renters had received
an unpleasant “Christmas surprise” after finding that the state-owned utility had “locked” their meters and cut-off supply over sums allegedly outstanding from September 2019 to present. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
neighbour in Lowell, Massachusetts, expressed shock at the woman’s death. “I mean, these poor people, they probably looked forward to this vacation for months,” she said. “Trip of a lifetime. It’s heartbreaking. It really is. Oh, my God, terrible. I can’t even imagine, don’t
THE Union of Tertiary Educators of the Bahamas (UTEB) is calling for “transparency” on behalf of its members at the Bahamas Technical and Vocational Institute (BTVI), regarding who has been chosen as the new BTVI president. UTEB said a BTVI Presidential Search Committee was initiated on November 25, 2022. But, despite the committee reportedly concluding its
SEE PAGE FIVE
SEE PAGE THREE
bHs calls for eNd to ‘cHummiNg’ practices BAHAMAS Humane Society president Kim Aranha called on the public to stop chumming in public swimming areas in response to recent fatal shark attacks. Last week, 44-year-old newlywed Lauren Erickson Van Wart of Massachusetts was killed while paddle boarding at the Sandals Resort when a shark bit her. In an interview with
LAUREN ERICKSON VAN WART an American news station, Beth Stack-Emerson, Mrs Van Wart’s next-door
By JADE RUSSELL Tribune Staff Reporters jrussel@tribunemedia.net
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper