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PM PROMISE TO DELIVER FOR GB PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis yesterday said his government was committed to delivering Grand Bahama’s economic potential just hours after another major fire ripped through Freeport’s once thriving International Bazaar. SENATOR Kirkland Russell points towards the latest blaze in Grand Bahama. Photo: Vandyke Hepburn SEE PAGES TWO & THREE
...AS BAZAAR BLAZES AGAIN
PARENTS WARNED AFTER BOY DROWNED IN CANAL
POLICE CHIEF: SCRAP BAIL FOR SERIOUS CRIMINALS
By LETRE SWEETING
By JADE RUSSELL jrussell@tribunemedia.net
A TEENAGE boy drowned while swimming with friends in the Seabreeze Canal yesterday. The tragedy prompted a call from police for parents to: “know where your kids are at all times, not
sometimes”. Last Tuesday, 11-year-old Gerodo Atwill Taylor Jr, was found dead and suspected to have drowned in a pond near the golf academy opposite the national sports stadium . On the same day the body of a juvenile male was pulled from waters near
Paradise Cove, Deadman’s Reef, Grand Bahama. He had gone swimming at Celebrity Beach near Paradise Cove with four boys and did not return to shore when the others did. A woman also drowned last Tuesday after she tried SEE PAGE FIVE
POLICE Commissioner Clayton Fernander says he fully supports Minister of National Security Wayne Munroe’s position that people charged with serious crimes should be kept in custody rather than be
released on bail. According to the commissioner yesterday, 55 percent of murder victims for the year were on bail. Minister of National Security Wayne Munroe had earlier told a local daily that people charged with murder should be kept in custody for their own
protection. According to Mr Munroe, more than 30 men who were out on bail this year were murdered. When asked about the minister’s comments on keeping persons on remand due to an increase of SEE PAGE SEVEN
SHELTER - WE CAN’T TAKE ANY MORE ANIMALS By LYNAIRE MUNNINGS lmunnings@tribunemedia.net THE Bahamas Humane Society has announced it is currently unable to accept stray or owner surrendered animals. This will continue to be the case until BHS is able to find homes for the animals it now has leaving additional room to accommodate new intake. This decision was in direct response to the safety and
PUPPIES at the Bahmas Humane Society. well-being of both animals and staff being jeopardised, due to the shelter’s capacity
substantially exceeding their resources. Kim Aranha, president of BHS, explained yesterday that the organisation has faced this issue before, however this time it is even more serious. One of the main issues facing BHS is residents not spaying or neutering their pets. “People are just bringing in animals and surrendering them,” she said. SEE PAGE FOUR
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
ALICIA WALLACE: BLINDED TO THE REALITY MANY DON’T CARE
- SEE PAGE EIGHT