12212020 NEWS AND SPORT

Page 1

MONDAY

McRib

i’m lovin’ it!

HIGH 80ºF LOW 67ºF

The Tribune Established 1903

24/7 BREAKING NEWS ON TRIBUNE242.COM

Biggest And Best!

VOLUME:118 No.21, DECEMBER 21, 2020

8 HOME

SPORTS: TRACK IS BACK WITH FIRST MEET SINCE MARCH PAGES

‘WE’RE HOPING FOR A MIRACLE’ LEADING THE WAY

Anti-oil campaigners wait for court date as drill ship nears well By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net ENVIRONMENTAL activists yesterday admitted they are seeking “a Christmas miracle” as the Bahamas Petroleum Company’s (BPC) drilling ship closed in on the location for its first exploratory oil well. Sam Duncombe, reEarth’s president, said it was “supremely depressing” that global positioning (GPS) tracker co-ordinates showed the Stena IceMax bearing down on its Perseverance One well location in waters some 90 miles west of Andros. With the activists’

Judicial Review challenge to BPC’s permits still awaiting a court date, and the imminent Christmas holiday likely to close down much of the judicial system, time is rapidly running out to obtain a stay or order halting the oil exploration outfit’s activities. Given it expects drilling of Perseverance One to take place within 45-60 days of starting, it is possible much of the work BPC intends to perform could be completed before the case initiated by Waterkeepers Bahamas and the Coalition to Protect Clifton Bay is heard or any ruling is made. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

SEVERAL members of the United States Congress have written to Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis and Environment Minister Romauld Ferreira urging them to reconsider the oil drilling agreement with Bahamas Petroleum Company. Yesterday, Dr Minnis told The Tribune he had not formally received the letter through the Office

‘WHY DIDN’T POLICE TRY TO EXTRADICT NYGARD?’ By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net ATTORNEY Fred Smith said Commissioner of Police Paul Rolle should have encouraged local extradition proceedings against Peter Nygard over the sexual assault allegations he faces. Mr Smith also called for a commission of inquiry into the events at Nygard Cay dating back to the 1980s. His comments yesterday came after Commissioner Rolle said as part of law enforcement’s investigation into Nygard, officers visited the fashion mogul’s Nygard Cay residence but found that the Canadian national had already left the country and would not return. Mr Smith, QC, said: “It is a sad and tragic reflection on The Bahamas that the FBI and the New York police should be pursuing extradition of Nygard instead of the Bahamian police.” SEE PAGE TWO

FATF TAKES BAHAMAS OFF WATCH LIST By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

US CONGRESS MEMBERS URGE MINNIS TO SAY NO TO DRILLING By EARYEL BOWLEG Tribune Staff Reporter ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

HO&USE

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

THE attorney general has voiced optimism the financial services industry will go “from strength to strength” after The Bahamas’ efforts to shore up its anti-financial crime regime gained global approval. Carl Bethel QC, hailed the two-year “team effort” that secured the country’s removal from the Financial Action Task Force’s enhanced surveillance initiative. The FATF certified on Friday that The Bahamas merited delisting after addressing previous weaknesses in its regulatory regime.

of the Prime Minister and offered no further comment. Attorney General Carl Bethel is expected to address the oil drilling issue when the Senate meets today. BPC’s drilling ship, Stena IceMAX, anchored out to sea between the Berry Islands and Grand Bahama last Tuesday. BPC planned to begin drilling its first exploratory well in waters 90 miles west of Andros yesterday. SEE PAGE THREE RAMANDA Lee gets her COVID-19 vaccination in Florida while wearing a T-shirt created by Bahamian artist Angelika Wallace-Whitfield. The Bahamian nurse works in the United States, and was vaccinated as part of the Jackson South Medical Center’s team, making her one of the first Bahamians to get the new vaccine. By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net NURSE Ramanda Lee became one of the first Bahamians to get the COVID-19 vaccine last Friday, pushing aside her initial scepticism. The 34-year-old grew up in New Providence but moved to the United States about nine years ago and currently works as a nurse at the Jackson South

Medical Center in Florida. The Jackson Health System has received over 19,000 vaccines that are being distributed throughout its hospitals. “My hospital, we got thrown into the whole COVID situation that was going on and what prompted me to get the vaccine was just seeing what the patients and families have been going through,” Nurse Lee told The Tribune. “I felt personally that it

was a step in the right direction to be one of the first people to get the vaccine.” Receiving the Pfizer vaccine, she said, was a simple, non-extraordinary process. “It was just like every other vaccination that you’ve done,” she said. “They registered me because it is a new vaccine and they want you to wait 15 to 30 minutes to see if you have a reaction. SEE PAGE FOUR

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

INSIGHT WHAT ARE WE DOING TO STOP PLASTIC POLLUTION?

SEE PAGE EIGHT


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.