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PLP leader Philip ‘Brave’ Davis faces a problem – his own past.
WHEN COVID-19 first came to our shores, there was a familiar line in the regular press conferences at the time.
OIL is the focus of attention across The Bahamas – and farther afield too, it would seem.
THE long arm of the law doesn’t seem so long in The Bahamas.
Here come the cuts.
Peter Nygard has been arrested and charged with sex trafficking and racketeering.
Dr Duane Sands made us raise an eyebrow with his comments reported in today’s Tribune.
POLICE poured hot sauce in a man’s eyes for a crime he was never charged with. That’s the allegation from Kenton Fines, who claims he was brutalised by officers he says searched his home without a warrant.
IT’S the easiest thing in the world to call for bi-partisanship.
THE doors of Atlantis open again to guests today – and while there may not be a rush to visit right away, the resort has high hopes for the start of next year.
IT was a landmark day yesterday in the UK. The British government dubbed it ‘V-day’, or vaccination day, and the first person to receive the approved Pfizer vaccine against COVID-19 was a 90-year-old Northern Irish woman.
TWO MPs stood up in Parliament yesterday to raise their voices against the current state of affairs in the government.
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas.
WHEN the sun rose yesterday, they were already waiting.
IF there was any doubt about the economic mountain we have to climb to recover from COVID-19, the International Monetary Fund ought to have put paid to it yesterday.
WHAT is your plan for how to put food on the table tomorrow? Or next week? Or next month?
WHILE there is good news in the fight against COVID-19, with cases here in The Bahamas still trending downwards and the prospect of a vaccine moving ever closer, the financial fallout from the pandemic has barely begun.
DOUGLAS Ngumi was wronged by this country.
THERE seems to be something of a conspiracy theory circulating over the government’s use of emergency powers.
AT the start of this week, we said in this column that Deputy Prime Minister Peter Turnquest faced a battle to keep that title. Yesterday, he waved the flag of surrender – for now – and resigned.
SOMETIMES, there is little in the way of thanks for those trying their hardest to help others.
TO read the story of the murder of Ednique Walker, who died at just eight years old alongside her mother, Alicia Sawyer, is tragic. The pair were victims of violence, and their murder is yet another alarm bell for our nation.
IT’S the end of an era – and not before time.
IN a surprise move, Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis revealed emergency powers were to be extended again last night – this time until the far side of Christmas.
IT always seemed likely that the plans for oil exploration might end up in court.