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IF you were hoping that our leaders would be singing from the same hymn sheet on the issue of crime, you would be sadly disappointed right now.
PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis stood in front of one of the biggest international political stages of all on Saturday – the 77th United Nations General Assembly.
THE lifting of the mask mandate is a major moment in the history of the pandemic in our country. It will also likely prompt mixed feelings for Bahamians.
WE HAVE been here before.
ON the day she was finally laid to rest the Queen still served.
LET us hear a tale of two opinions on whether The Bahamas should become a republic.
TWO contrasting stories in today’s Tribune show how people living in the same country can be worlds apart.
THE news of the death of Queen Elizabeth II was only a day old before Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis floated the prospect of The Bahamas going without a monarch altogether.
THE death of Queen Elizabeth II is the end of an era.
THE news of a fatal shark attack spread quickly yesterday.
THE end of the AIDS epidemic is in sight?
THE flags flew at half mast across the nation yesterday.
PRIME Minister Philip “Brave” Davis took his warnings over climate change to Abaco on Friday.
THERE has been much talk lately of the impact of climate change on the economy – but the very human cost of climate disasters are still with us.
THE devil’s in the detail, so they say.
DESPITE his absence from the front-line for many years, there is no one who can quite stir up the political scene quite like former Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham. Like him or not, he gets people talking.
THE murder of Omar Davis Jr has rightly appalled the nation.
THE sight of three former Prime Ministers standing alongside the current occupant of that office at yesterday’s Caribbean regional heads of government meeting was a powerful image – particularly as Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis called for unity with regard to climate change.
THERE is a certain jarring difference between the topics that the Commissioner of Police, Clayton Fernander, is choosing to address and the issues on the street.
SHOULD bail be a right?
MURDERS up, armed robberies up – and the Police Commissioner hoping we won’t go over 100 murders for the year – it’s a bleak situation, make no mistake.
GRAND Bahama is a conundrum that generations of political leaders have failed to solve.
WHEN COVID-19 first hit our shores, there was a move by a number of Bahamians towards growing more food in our own gardens – rather than deal with long lines, empty shelves and the risk of infection.
FIRST, the good news – gas prices are starting to fall globally and The Bahamas will see the benefit from that.
THE TREASURE of the Nuestra Señora de las Maravillas was lost under the waves of The Bahamas for more than three centuries – but on Monday, a museum will open to showcase some of the items found by underwater explorers.