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IT seems mindboggling.
THERE was a lot of anticipation ahead of Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis’ national address last night – but did he deliver?
WHEN Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis addresses the nation tonight, he faces one of the greatest dilemmas of his administration.
IT’S summer – and the power is going out.
Should vaccination be mandatory?
Stop us if you’ve heard this one before.
THE surge in COVID-19 cases is hitting our health services hard.
IN acknowledging the spike in COVID-19 cases recently, Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis yesterday chose some curious wording.
THE worlds of politics and the pandemic are coming crashing together this week.
IT would be easy to overreact to the news that people can no longer get the first of their COVID-19 jabs as supplies run low.
THE compromise offered by the government during the ongoing legal case over citizenship may not be the end of the story, but it’s a welcome stepping stone along the way.
A bloody weekend has put our murder rate in the spotlight again – with five men killed between Thursday and Monday.
THERE are too many murders in our country. One would be too many, but our murder rate puts us among the highest in the world.
COMPLAINTS work. THAT’S one lesson to take from the lead story in today’s Tribune. Regulator URCA had been given the task of investigating the restructuring of Cable Bahamas’ REV TV cable packages. They have approved the restructuring – but in the process they received complaint after complaint after complaint about service interruptions and other issues.
THERE are very obviously missing pieces in the story of what happened that led to the plane crash in Abaco that killed two pilots.
OUR country’s hesitation to get vaccinated is coming home to roost – with Princess Margaret Hospital now at full capacity.
IN yesterday’s Tribune, we reported on the concerns of nurses with a number of workers sick with COVID, and one having recently died. Those are valid concerns indeed – so why is it that in today’s Tribune, we hear that there is a hesitancy within healthcare workers to take the vaccine?
WHO killed Petty Officer Percival Perpall and attempted to kill two more Marines at Government House in 2019?
TAKE a look at the woman on our front page today.
WHEN we wrote about the return of tourism on Friday, we said the Americans were coming – well, they’ll be here sooner than you might have thought.
THE Americans are coming.
THE question of the illegal treatment of Douglas Ngumi is not at issue. He was locked up for six and a half years illegally – that’s already been ruled on in court. The Bahamas illegally imprisoned him.
WHEN the Supreme Court ruled in May last year that children born out of wedlock to Bahamian men and foreign women are citizens at birth and do not have to wait until 18 to apply for citizenship, Attorney General Carl Bethel vowed to appeal.
PERHAPS we are too eager for good news – but any hopes we might have emerged from the third wave of COVID-19 affecting our country are perhaps premature.
LET’S make three wishes for The Bahamas.