'Tough Love' for wayward youth applauded
WE COMMEND National Security Minister Dr Bernard Nottage for reintroducing “tough love” into the schools to discipline unruly students.
The PLP enters its third year - what of the future?
IT HAS always been said that when America sneezes, the Bahamas catches a cold.
Public deserves an answer to National Insurance question
IN THE heat of the argument on the hiring of a “non-performing contractor” to build a replica of the same project from which he had been fired, it was claimed that former prime minister Hubert Ingraham had cancelled the first contract for “purely political expediency”.
BTC: Foreign-owned, but Bahamians in charge
ON THIS page today, a letter, signed only as “See the Danger”, questions not only the morality of selling Bahamas Telecommunications to a foreign company, but also the legality of such a sale.
Jamaica beats Bahamas with Freedom of Information
TODAY, Mrs Alison Bethel McKenzie arrives in Nassau on her way to Jamaica to represent IPI at the two-day World Press Freedom Day conference, hosted by UNESCO. The conference opens in Jamaica on Saturday and is expected to attract wide media coverage.
Politicians out of touch with the people
SPEAKING at the opening of the Bahamas Branch of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association’s post-election seminar three weeks ago, Prime Minister Christie announced that he thought this was the “appropriate time to consider” the construction of a new parliamentary building that would house both the House of Assembly and the Senate.
Marijuana users do not 'function perfectly'
“THERE is no such thing as being inebriated from weed. You can smoke all day long and still work, still drive, still talk, basically you can still function perfectly. But drink straight for two hours. You won’t be able to stand, talk or function at all. Yet weed is illegal... How did this planet get so stupid?”
The question of recognising marijuana for medical use
THE use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, says National Security Minister Dr Bernard Nottage, is a knotty issue that will soon have to be debated. Government is now feeling the pressure as the police discover more and more fields of marijuana growing in remote areas, not only on New Providence, but in the Family Islands, particularly Grand Bahama.
Nassau hotels eye strong Easter peak
Major Nassau/Paradise Island hotels are reporting high occupancies for the Easter holiday period, one executive confirming to Tribune Business yesterday that it was seeing strong performance from its leisure business for the Spring Break/Easter period.
Webshops are still in limbo – status must be settled
IN this column, we have already dealt with the two questions that Bahamians were asked to answer in the gambling referendum on January 28 last year, but in view of comments made by gambling chief Craig Flowers, in a radio interview last week, we return to the subject today.
April Fool's Joke: Elbow Cay Lighthouse sold, moving to Exuma
AS if NEMA’s startling announcement of a tsunami surging towards these islands had not caused enough hysteria in the Bahamas on Wednesday, the news that a wealthy Texan had purchased the Elbow Cay Reef Lighthouse in Hope Town and was about to move it to his private island in the Exumas, promised a tumultuous rebellion as it started to circulate in Nassau last night.
Is world history today repeating itself?
AS WE watched in horror a Russian tank smash through the gates of a Ukrainian army base in Crimea’s Balbek city on Saturday, it was as though a sledge hammer had forced open the memory box of a small child sitting in her father’s editorial office many years ago listening to him discussing another European land grab by a mad tyrant.
It’s now time for Bahamian society to heal itself
THE Bahamas has lost its moral fibre, a Bahamian recently remarked. He wanted to know whether we agreed, and, if so, when did we first notice it.
Government and Opposition must settle webshop issue
ON January 30 last year — two days after less than half the voting public said “no” to the legalisation of webshops— The Tribune’s headline read: “PM: Webshops must close now.”
Immigration will cripple Bahamas' growth
EARLY yesterday morning, we received a telephone call from a member of the public who has close friends in both political camps – PLP and FNM. He was concerned. In fact he was very concerned.


