News Archives

Goodman guilty

Goodman guilty

Wed, May 31st 2017, 09:11 AM

Kofhe Goodman was once again convicted of murder in a retrial Tuesday in one of the country's most haunting missing child cases, almost six years after 11-year-old Marco Archer vanished when he went to buy candy from a neighborhood store.
Marco's remains were found on September 28, 2011, five days after he failed to return to his Brougham Street home.
The little boy's naked body was found wrapped in a sheet behind the Cable Beach apartment complex where Goodman lived, and his clothing was found in the garbage in front of the building. A fitted sheet with the same pattern as the one that shrouded Marco's corpse was found on the bed of Goodman's apartment when police searched it. Goodman's DNA was also found on Marco's shirt.
Goodman showed no reaction as jurors delivered their verdict, in stark contrast to the expletive-laced rant that followed his first conviction in 2013 that climaxed with him spitting on a juror.
However, he did ask Justice Carolita Bethell to expedite his sentencing and indicated that he intends to appeal both conviction and sentence.
The Court of Appeal overturned his conviction last year due to adverse pretrial publicity, the conduct of his lawyer, and the failure of the judge to discharge the jury after members of the panel fought.
The first trial dragged on for almost four months. This time, the testimony concluded in a week.
Goodman returns to court on July 27 for sentencing and prosecutors are once again seeking the death penalty.
He elected to remain silent in the face of allegations that he kidnapped the child to have sex with him. Although the prosecution maintained this was the motive, the pathologist was unable to find evidence of sexual assault due to the advanced state of decomposition of the body.
Goodman's lawyer, Wayne Munroe, QC, said that he advised his client not to take the stand as the prosecution had failed to provide any evidence linking him to the crime.
Tommel Roker, Ryszard Humes and Alex Morley assisted Munroe.
DPP Garvin Gaskin, Cordell Frazier and Rose Ferguson appeared for the prosecution.

PLP condemns removal of NIB execs
PLP condemns removal of NIB execs

Wed, May 31st 2017, 09:07 AM

BAIC probe ongoing, police say
BAIC probe ongoing, police say

Wed, May 31st 2017, 09:04 AM

PM to address nation twice a year
PM to address nation twice a year

Wed, May 31st 2017, 09:01 AM

Body recovered near Prince George Wharf
Body recovered near Prince George Wharf

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:59 AM

Ernst Young pitched audits to Cabinet, Newbold says

Ernst Young pitched audits to Cabinet, Newbold says

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:57 AM

Accounting firm Ernst & Young has presented to Cabinet concerning the forensic audits the Minnis administration has committed to conducting at Bank of The Bahamas (BOB), Urban Renewal, the former government's hurricane relief program, and the Bahamas Agriculture and Marine Science Institute (BAMSI).
During the first press conference with Press Secretary Anthony "Ace" Newbold, it was noted that the accounting firm presented to the government at last week's Cabinet meeting, but a decision has not been made to engage the firm.
"I mean to tell you that Ernst & Young also made a presentation to Cabinet on the proposed audit of public sector agencies, and again, this is in keeping with the prime minister's statement about the need to know what is going on in the various ministries," Newbold said at the Office of the Prime Minister.
Asked whether the government is deliberating on the firm to engage to conduct the audits, Newbold said, "The government obviously also has the Auditor General's Office, which we know is severely handicapped.
"That is another commitment the prime minister has made, to provide funding so that the auditor general is properly staffed and you don't have to look outside for any outside auditors."
When asked how many audits are underway and in which areas, Newbold said he does not know how many have begun, but the "National Insurance one has started".
"I believe it is an internal audit," he said.
"I'll confirm that for you as well."
On Monday, Prime Minister Dr. Hubert Minnis said a forensic audit will be conducted at the National Insurance Board (NIB), though he did not want to expand on the full scope of the forensic audits.
He said he did not want to alert guilty parties, who may "start to hide the information".
Asked to confirm whether NIB will be forensically audited, Newbold said it is "probable", but he said that will need to be confirmed.
It was pointed out that the former government spent $900,000 in 2013 to conduct an independent audit, which revealed a host of issues at NIB.
Newbold said that audit took place four years ago and "lots of things can happen in four years".
During the Minnis administration's first Cabinet meeting, the government said there will also be forensic audits on other departments and programs, and all ministers will conduct audits within their respective ministries, including departments and agencies funded by taxpayer dollars or people hired on contract.
On the night of the FNM's victory, Minnis warned that while an FNM government will not victimize anyone, those who have abused positions of trust "may have something to fear".

Major: Carnival report soon complete
Major: Carnival report soon complete

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:55 AM

Separating elections and budgets
Separating elections and budgets

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:53 AM

Conceit blinded Adrian Gibson
Conceit blinded Adrian Gibson

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:50 AM

The way forward, pt. 1

The way forward, pt. 1

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:43 AM

The defeat of the Progressive Liberal Party by the Free National Movement in the general election on May 10, 2017 ironically provides a watershed opportunity for the oldest political party in The Bahamas to reflect, refresh and rebound. The dramatic shift in the political fortunes of these two parties is best captured by a comparison between the general election results of 2012 with 2017.
In 2012, the PLP won 29 out of 38 parliamentary seats, with 75,815 votes or 48.6 percent of the votes; while the FNM won nine parliamentary seats, with 64,634 votes or 42.1 percent of the votes. In the general election of 2017, the FNM won 35 out of 39 parliamentary seats, with 91,413 votes or 57 percent of the votes; while the PLP won four out of the 39 parliamentary seats, with 59,289 votes or 37 percent of the votes.
What accounts for this dramatic reversal of fortunes of the two main political parties and the repudiation of the PLP?
Firstly, I thank Perry Christie for his 40 years of public service in the highest public offices of our country. That is a testament of his patriotism, love and commitment to The Bahamas. I commend him for taking the honorable course of resigning as leader of the PLP after the general election. That course is within the best tradition of the Westminster system. I hasten to add that there were many contributing factors to the defeat of the PLP, including the failure to provide a clear vision and political and social agenda for the future of The Bahamas and the weak governance and democratic structures of the party itself.
Secondly, I thank the Progressive Liberal Party for giving me the privilege to be its candidate in Fort Charlotte. I am grateful to the branch of Fort Charlotte and the scores of volunteers and friends who campaigned with me and contributed to my campaign. I appreciated the hospitality of the residents of Fort Charlotte, who invited me, my wife, Marion, and our campaign team members into their homes, listened to our platform and shared their concerns with us. I congratulate Mark Humes on his election as the member of Parliament for Fort Charlotte and wish him well. I will continue to contribute to the community of Fort Charlotte.
I congratulate the FNM on its victory in the general election. I commend Prime Minister Dr. Hubert Minnis and his government, based on the Speech from the Throne, for committing to implement progressive and liberal policies to continue the decolonizing process, deepen the democratic process, improve governance processes and institutions, increase accountability and expand economic opportunities for the marginalized.
I am especially pleased that the government intends to establish an Independent Electoral Commission and Boundaries Commission; implement a system of recall for non-performing members of Parliament and anti-corruption measures for parliamentarians and public officers; establish an office of ombudsman and an independent director of public prosecution; initiate campaign finance reform; set term limits for the office of prime minister; and begin an economic revitalization for inner city communities.
It is again ironic that these reforms are consistent with the core values of the PLP. These reforms were proposed by Sir Lynden Pindling in 1998 in a symposium at The College of the Bahamas after he had led the PLP in two electoral defeats. These reforms were also clearly laid out in my leadership platform of 2016/2017. It is pure irony that these reforms were neither embraced by the PLP convention in January 2017, nor contained in the Charter for Governance 2017.
Today, the progressive and liberal political and social agenda is being promoted by the FNM. This shift in the public narrative of social and political reform explains, I believe, why the FNM has a greater appeal to Bahamian millennials, independent voters, women and sectors of the political base of the PLP.
The rebuilding, rebranding and rebounding of the PLP should, I believe, begin with a focus on the core values of the party and the crafting of a political and social agenda for the future development of The Bahamas and the party. Over the next five years, the PLP must do more than react, oppose and criticize the FNM; it must provide a most compelling and relevant vision and agenda for political and social reform for sustainable development and good governance.

Core values of the Progressive Liberal Party
On Monday, October 26, 1953, the PLP published as a paid advertisement in The Nassau Daily Tribune, a document entitled the "The Core Values of the PLP", wherein the party committed to do as follows:
(a) Provide servant leadership to the Bahamian people and not make the people the servants of the government;
(b) Commit to honest political activity and democratic practice;
(c) Ensure maximum opportunity for all Bahamians to participate in the economic and social development of The Bahamas;
(d) Serve all Bahamians and not just the privileged few;
(e) Create sustainable development in Family Islands;
(f) Protect the fundamental rights of workers to collective bargaining and the right of employers to a good day's work;
(g) Provide quality education equally to males and females to facilitate social and economic productivity and produce better citizens;
(h) Ensure equality between men and women;
(i) Promote and protect the fundamental rights of all Bahamians to life, work, vote, worship as he/she sees fit, participate in the administration of government, peaceful assembly, freedom of speech, of religion, of the press and the equal protection of the law.

These core values can be reduced to four basic concepts: (i) honesty (integrity and trustworthiness) and democratic governance; (ii) sustainable economic development strategy and promotion of Bahamian entrepreneurship; (iii) equal opportunity for all Bahamian citizens to the public goods/resources of The Bahamas; and (iv) protection of the fundamental rights of citizens and freedom of the press in The Bahamas.
These core values constitute, I believe, a social contract formed 64 years ago between the Progressive Liberal Party and the Bahamian people to build and advance our democracy. These core values were framed by founders of the PLP, namely Henry M. Taylor, Cyril St. John Stevenson and William W. Cartwright and its first officers, John S. Carey, Felix Russell, Urban H. Knowles, Holly Brown, Paul Farrington and Clement Pinder.
Since 1953, these core values have emboldened thousands of Bahamians to risk life, limb and the immediate welfare of their families in the political and civil rights struggle for Bahamian workers, universal suffrage, economic enfranchisement, racial equality, majority rule and independence.
The Bahamian human rights struggle during the 20th century was, for the most part, led by the PLP and the labor movement under Sir Randol Fawkes, espousing these core values. The leadership in this human rights struggle, resulting in majority rule, independence and establishment of the national institutions of state, came under the early governance of the PLP. Iconic personalities in this national struggle, based on these values, included Sir Henry Taylor, Sir Lynden Pindling, Arthur Hanna, Sir Milo Butler, Clarence Bain, Georgina Symonette, Mabel Walker, Dame Doris Johnson, Effie Walkes, Eugenia Lockhart, Sir Randol Fawkes, Alvin Braynen, Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield, Warren Levarity, Sir Arthur Foulkes, Rev. Dr. H.W. Brown and Canon William Thompson. The PLP, therefore, has a valid claim in the national narrative as the progressive and liberal vanguard of social reform and transformation within The Bahamas.
However, over the 44 years of political independence, the public perception of the PLP has shifted from being the progressive and liberal vanguard of the independence process to a party more aligned with foreign interests over Bahamians, a lack of national vision, weak leadership, corruption and scandals.
In the meantime, the social conditions for many of our citizens, especially in the inner city communities on New Providence and on many of the Family islands, remain desperate. After the Burma Road Riots of June 1942, Dr. Claudius Walker, representing the workers, summarized the condition of Bahamians to the Duke of Windsor, as governor, and his advisors in the following terms: "The underlying causes for this social unrest are manifold. We are in the majority, but we have minority problems. We are poorly housed, poorly fed and poorly educated. Truth to tell, we are the wretched of the earth."
Ironically, from my leadership listening tour (2016/2017) of many of our Family Island communities and from my canvassing of constituents in Fort Charlotte over the past two years, I confirm that far too many citizens in our archipelago remain "poorly housed, poorly fed and poorly educated".
However, I believe that the Progressive Liberal Party, based on its core values, can reclaim its role as the progressive and liberal alternative for the full realization of the sovereign potential of the Bahamian people. This reclamation can only happen if the party acknowledges its problems, recommits to its core values, refreshes itself and offers a meaningful and dynamic political and social agenda for transformation and success.
In part two, I will share my observations about the party's governance process in relation to its core values. Further, I will propose how the PLP can reconnect with those core values and the independence mission that inspired three generations of Bahamians into public service to advance the Bahamian national project.

o Alfred Sears is a Queen's Counsel. He has served as a member of Parliament for Fort Charlotte and in Cabinet.

Roberts: Govt engaged in victimization
Roberts: Govt engaged in victimization

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:42 AM

Elks host conference
Elks host conference

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:39 AM

Jamaican woman charged with human trafficking
Jamaican woman charged with human trafficking

Wed, May 31st 2017, 08:33 AM

Business boot camp for Grand Bahama

Business boot camp for Grand Bahama

Wed, May 31st 2017, 06:00 AM

THE Grand Bahama Port Authority's Business Innovation and e-Commerce Boot Camp is fast approaching and participants can expect to hear from global presenters who will help them compete and grow their businesses. The event will be held June 8 at the