Bahamas send Haitian nationals home as they begin to enforce new immigration rules
The Bahamian government sent two planeloads of migrants to Haiti on Wednesday after new immigration rules took effect this month in the Caribbean country.
More than 200 people, including undocumented migrants and Bahamian-born Haitians, were deported and arrived at Toussaint Louverture international airport in Port au Prince.
The government, amid fierce criticism, aims to become less hospitable to its swelling population of migrants lacking legal status.
The island chain of about 360,000 has a foreign-born population of more than 18 percent, according to an official report released last month.
While the precise number of those who migrated illegally is unclear, the islands long have drawn migrants sailing from nearby Haiti.
Census figures from 2010 show more than one out of 10 people in the Bahamas is Haitian, up from 3.6 percent in 1970.
One of the deportees, 18-year-old Youtchike Dormeus, said that they are treating people like dogs.
The country, which denies treating anyone inhumanely, has deported 3,000 people this year.
But the manner in which the tightening of borders being carried out is coming under criticism from human rights activists, who complain of arbitrary and heavy-handed enforcement that is sparking fear in the shanty towns where many migrants live.
Under the new rules that took effect 1 November, everyone must have the passport of their nationality and, if they are not a Bahamian, a valid residency or work stamp.
In addition, the government is tightening the process for employers to receive work permits for non-Bahamians and requiring first-time applicants for residency permits to apply in their home countries.
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BAHAMAS NEWS BAHAMAS ALL STARS MARCHING BAND
BAHAMAS NEWS
BAHAMAS ALL-STARS MARCHING BAND TO PARTICIPATE IN NATIONAL CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL PARADE IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
BAHAMAS NEWS
BAHAMAS ALL-STARS MARCHING BAND TO PARTICIPATE IN NATIONAL CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL PARADE IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 8, 2019 — The Bahamas All-Stars Marching Band will be among the 15 marching bands that will participate in the National Cherry Blossom Festival Parade on Saturday, April 13, 2019 in downtown Washington, D.C.
This was confirmed in a press release by Band Director Yonell Justilien, who said the band “will be arriving to Washington on tour buses from Orlando on Friday morning, April 12th and leaving on the evening of the 14th for Orlando.” Including persons travelling with the band, the group will include a contingent of 108 persons.
“The reputation of the band’s outstanding musical ability, marching and performance skills from both local and international recognition continues to open doors to showcase the talent of young Bahamians in all areas of Performing Arts,” the release said. “We are delighted to carry the Bahamian flag to this major event in Washington DC. Our members are looking forward to putting on an exciting show with a Bahamian flare to the American audience.”
“This is another major accomplishment for our youth development organization which follows our previous performances such as the St. Patrick’s Day Festival in Ireland (2017), Florida Classics in Orlando (2011, 2012 & 2015), Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York (2014) and Howard University Homecoming Battle of the Bands in Washington DC (2013 – crowned champions).
“One of our main objective is to expose young Bahamian talent to the local and international community. I am confident that Washington and the millions of spectators and television viewers will enjoy the entertainment and high energy Bahamas All-Stars will bring to the Capital. The talents of our youth have been sharpened by these high-level exposures and there have been many tangible accomplishments, which we note as indicators of the same. To date, over 180 of our members have been awarded both academic and music scholarships from various universities across the United States and Canada. Many more are enrolled at the University of The Bahamas and others with the uniform branches of The Bahamas.”
The one-mile parade route travels along historic Constitution Avenue, beginning at 7th Street and ending at 17th Street. Along the way it passes the National Archives, the Department of Justice, Smithsonian Museums, the Washington Monument and the White House.
Following are the marching bands participating in the 2019 National Cherry Blossom Festival Parade.
• Bahamas All Stars Band, Nassau, Bahamas
• Ballou High School Band, Washington, D.C.
• Chelsea High School Band, Chelsea, Alabama
• Colleton County High School Band, Walterboro, South Carolina
• Creekview High School Band, Canton, Georgia
• Freedom High School Band, Orlando, Florida
• Lorain High School Band, Lorain, Ohio
• Northgate High School Band, Newnan, Georgia
• Sam Houston High School Band, Lake Charles, Louisiana
• Seneca Valley High School Band, Harmony, Pennsylvania
• Sequoyah High School Band, Canton, Georgia
• Smiths Station High School Band, Smiths Station, Alabama
• South Kitsap High School Band, Port Orchard, Washington
• Spain Park High School Band, Hoover, Alabama
• Truman High School Band, Independence, Missouri
THE VIDEO SAYS IT ALL FUNKY NASSAU Congratulations BAHAMAS ALL-STARS MARCHING BAND TO PARTICIPATING IN NATIONAL CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL PARADE IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
THIS MAKES ME (Raphael Munnings) and the entire BAHAMAS VERY,VERY PROUD. KEEP MOVING..
A touch of Bahamian history on Bahamian TV.
The Round Tower Windsor Castle NATIONAL ARCHIVES LYFORD CAY BAHAMAS Scotland Yard Fraud Bribery Case
MAINSTREAM NEWS MEDIA EXTRACTS:
The Carroll Foundation Trust and parallel Gerald 6th Duke of Sutherland Trust multi-billion dollar corporate identity theft offshore tax fraud bribery case which is encircling the beleaguered Attorney General has revealed that the HM Government use of the Official Secrets Act and a startling array of DSMA-Notice news media blackout protocols is thought to be the spectacular end game in this case of international importance.
Sources have revealed that the Farrer & Co law firm media partner Julian Pike who is known to represent the Rupert Murdoch News Corporation empire and Sky News are thought to be “closely monitoring” the unfolding developments in a case “centered around” the George 5th Duke of Sutherland estate and the Gerald 6th Duke of Sutherland Trust Gerald J. H. Carroll “life tenant” worldwide interests.
Further sources have confirmed that one of Gerald Carroll’s lawyers Withersworldwide based in the City of London fraudulently incorporated a shadow “criminal parallel trust” which embezzled more than a bewildering two hundred and fifty million dollars of the Carroll Foundation Trust huge treasury investment holdings in this massive bank fraud heist operation spanning three continents.
10 Downing Street leaked sources have said that the explosive FBI Scotland Yard cross-border criminal “standard of proof” prosecution files contain twenty eight forged and falsified UK Companies House and State of Delaware “registered” Carroll Trust Corporations which are “directly linked” to the fraudulent incorporation of Barclays International British Virgin Islands Bahamas Cayman Islands offshore accounts and HSBC International Gibraltar Jersey offshore accounts.
In a stunning twist the Queen’s bankers Coutts & Co former Chairman Lord David Douglas-Home is also seriously implicated in the parallel fraudulent incorporation of Coutts & Co Gerald J. H. Carroll accounts along with the systematic break-ins burglaries seizures and criminal theft offences “targeted” at the Carroll Foundation Trust multi-million dollar Eaton Square Belgravia penthouse and Westminster residences in central London covering a bizarre parallel six to eight year period.
The Carroll Foundation Trust files are held within a complete lockdown at the FBI Washington DC field office and the Metropolitan Police Scotland Yard London under the supervision of the Commissioner Cressida Dick QPM who has an intimate knowledge of this case which stretches the globe.
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The Creole Affair: The Slave Rebellion that Led the U.S. and Great Britain to the Brink of War
Author Arthur Downey discusses the most successful slave rebellion in American history. Held against their will aboard the Creole–a slave ship on its way from Richmond to New Orleans in 1841–the rebels seized control of the ship and changed course to the Bahamas. Because the Bahamas were subject to British rule of law, the slaves were eventually set free, and their presence on foreign soil sparked one of America's most contentious diplomatic battles with the United Kingdom. A book signing follows the program.
Today In History: The Bahamas Gain Independence
On July 10th of 1973 The Bahamas gained independence. Prior to this the Bahamas had been a colony under the British Crown since 1718. Join Cliff for this episode as he discusses Independence and how Bahamas' independence has helped them prosper as a nation.
That Was History is an educational channel with a laid back feel. Each episode contains a historical event and facts that correspond to a particular date. Join the That Was History community and start getting your daily history update, today!
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Nassau 1951 Vacation ~ Hobby Horse Hall Race Track & Harbor Cruise
Great color footage of Nassau in the Bahamas. Shows the outdoor market along the docks, Paradise Beach, horse racing at what appears to be the Hobby Horse Hall Race track, panorama of downtown Nassau, swimming off a floating dock, water-skiers (complete with jumping), tennis, sunbathing on the beach, a quick harbor cruise on a glass bottomed boat and fishing.
Bahamians look for loved ones as 1,300 missing
(13 Sep 2019) FOR CLEAN VERSION SEE STORY NUMBER: 4229888
People in the northern Bahamas scan social media, peer under rubble, or try to follow the smell of death in an attempt to find family and friends - amid alarming reports that 1,300 people remain listed as missing nearly two weeks after Hurricane Dorian hit.
The government has cautioned that the list is preliminary and many could be staying in shelters and just haven't been able to connect with loved ones.
But fears are growing that many died when the Category 5 storm slammed into the archipelago's northern region with winds in excess of 185 mph and severe flooding that toppled concrete walls, cracked trees in half and ripped swings off playgrounds as Dorian battered the area for a day and a half.
Heartbroken but still life goes on, Phil Thomas Sr. said as he leaned against the frame of his roofless home in the fishing village of McLean's Town and looked into the distance.
The boat captain has not seen his 30-year-old son, his two grandsons or his granddaughter since the storm.
They were all staying with his daughter-in-law, who was injured and taken to a hospital in the capital, Nassau, after the U.S. Coast Guard found her, but only her.
He's heard rumors that someone saw a boat belonging to his son, a marine pilot, though the vessel also hasn't been found.
The loss weighs on Thomas, who said he tries to stay busy cleaning up his home so he doesn't think about them.
Meanwhile, a cluster of heavy thunderstorms is heading toward the Bahamas and is expected to further drench the communities bashed by Dorian.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Thursday that the system was expected to become a tropical storm within 36 hours and would hit parts of the northwestern Bahamas with tropical storm-force winds and heavy rains.
Others who were reported missing and presumed dead were found in part thanks to the determination of people like Joyce Thomas, who did not stop searching for her brother, Bennett.
She traveled from Nassau to Freeport in Grand Bahama and then drove out to McLean's Town, only to be forced to turn around because the street was still impassable.
She tried again the next day and managed to reach the neighborhood where they grew up. There, she found only the foundation of his home. Her fear grew as she walked through the neighborhood.
You know I lose so much of my family members but I'm really thankful for my brother, she said having found him alive. That's my one and only you know, so I had to come and make sure that he's okay.
Still, reunions, although few, are happening nearly two weeks after the storm made landfall Sept. 1.
The family of Trevon Laing had thought the 24-year-old man was dead after a police officer told them that two bodies had been found in the community of Gold Rock Creek, including that of a young man. His mother went into mourning for five days.
When his family visited the community to verify what they were told, Laing wasn't around, buttressing their fears that he was dead. When he returned, he said, he found his brother crying on the front porch.
Getting reunited with them after the hurricane was the biggest part of it for me, he said That really filled my heart with joy.
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Bahamians look for loved ones as 1,300 missing
(13 Sep 2019) People in the northern Bahamas scan social media, peer under rubble, or try to follow the smell of death in an attempt to find family and friends - amid alarming reports that 1,300 people remain listed as missing nearly two weeks after Hurricane Dorian hit.
The government has cautioned that the list is preliminary and many could be staying in shelters and just haven't been able to connect with loved ones.
But fears are growing that many died when the Category 5 storm slammed into the archipelago's northern region with winds in excess of 185 mph and severe flooding that toppled concrete walls, cracked trees in half and ripped swings off playgrounds as Dorian battered the area for a day and a half.
Heartbroken but still life goes on, Phil Thomas Sr. said as he leaned against the frame of his roofless home in the fishing village of McLean's Town and looked into the distance.
The boat captain has not seen his 30-year-old son, his two grandsons or his granddaughter since the storm. They were all staying with his daughter-in-law, who was injured and taken to a hospital in the capital, Nassau, after the U.S. Coast Guard found her — but only her.
He's heard rumors that someone saw a boat belonging to his son, a marine pilot, though the vessel also hasn't been found.
The loss weighs on Thomas, who said he tries to stay busy cleaning up his home so he doesn't think about them.
Meanwhile, a cluster of heavy thunderstorms is heading toward the Bahamas and is expected to further drench the communities bashed by Dorian.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Thursday that the system was expected to become a tropical storm within 36 hours and would hit parts of the northwestern Bahamas with tropical storm-force winds and heavy rains.
In the Abaco islands, which Prime Minister Hubert Minnis says are mostly decimated, the search for loved ones is even more intense.
At least 42 people died in Abaco and eight in Grand Bahama, and Minnis has warned that number will increase significantly.
He assured Bahamians in a recent televised address that the government was working hard to recover bodies and notify families, adding that officials are providing counseling amid reports of nightmares and psychological trauma.
Others who were reported missing and presumed dead were found in part thanks to the determination of people like Joyce Thomas, who did not stop searching for her brother, Bennett.
She traveled from Nassau to Freeport in Grand Bahama and then drove out to McLean's Town, only to be forced to turn around because the street was still impassable.
She tried again the next day and managed to reach the neighborhood where they grew up. There, she found only the foundation of his home. Her fear grew as she walked through the neighborhood.
You know I lose so much of my family members but I'm really thankful for my brother, she said having found him alive. That's my one and only you know, so I had to come and make sure that he's okay.
Still, reunions, although few, are happening nearly two weeks after the storm made landfall Sept. 1.
The family of Trevon Laing had thought the 24-year-old man was dead after a police officer told them that two bodies had been found in the community of Gold Rock Creek, including that of a young man. His mother went into mourning for five days.
Getting reunited with them after the hurricane was the biggest part of it for me, he said That really filled my heart with joy.
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DeAndre Ayton on growing up in Bahamas, path to NBA stardom | SportsCenter
Phoenix Suns star Deandre Ayton visits his home town in Nassau, Bahamas with Marc Spears and discusses his childhood, how he was discovered at a basketball camp and Bahamian culture.
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Princess Margaret in Nassau - 1955
Princess Margaret arrived at the Bahamas in the Britannia, and she was greeted by Lord Ranfurly, the Governor. Her Royal Highness visited Nassau before her return to Britain in the Stratocruiser Canopus. At London Airport, the Queen, the Duke, Prince Charles and Princess Anne were waiting with Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother for the Princess's arrival home.
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Bahamas Genealogy Heritage Conference
Hurricane Frances tears into Bahamas
1. Water rushing up on harbour
2. Waves breaking
3. Emergency sign
4. Boat rocking in harbour
5. Various gusts of wind and rain lashing promenade
6. Various water flying onto promenade
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Carl Smith, National Disaster Coordinator:
The biggest concern would be storm surges. You know we are many islands and we're flat. We love to be near the waterfront. Many of our homes and resorts are on the coastline so we've responded and are moving inland because surges are very dangerous.
8. Boat rocking
STORYLINE:
Hurricane Frances raged through the sparsely populated southeastern Bahamas on Thursday, unleashing ferocious winds and kicking up powerful waves, as it headed for the island chain's main towns of Nassau and Freeport and on a path for Florida.
Residents nailed boards over their windows, buying food and jugs of water as they prepared to shut themselves inside their homes and ride out the storm.
Most buildings in the Bahamas are built of concrete, stone or other heavy materials to withstand winds of up to 125 miles per hour (200 kilometres per hour).
Earlier, the Category 4 storm's lashing 140 mile per hour (220 kilometre per hour) winds had Bahamians crowding outside hardware stores, loading plywood onto pickup trucks.
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1960s Bahamas Local Community in HD from 35mm
1960s Bahamas Local Community in HD from 35mm from the Kinolibrary Archive Film Collections. To order the clip clean and high res or to find out more visit Clip ref CHX826. 4K master from 35mm colour negative film available.
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Pan local people sat out in square, old and young, Bahamian. Village, teenage boys throwing ball in street, playing games, baseball.
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Newspaper headlines greet Bahamians
Nassau, Bahamas
1. Newspaper vendor
2. Newspaper headline reading (English): Shane and Anna Nicole: dramatic new photos
3. Various interior of 'The Tribune' newsroom
4. Close-up of newspaper
5. Various set-up shots of 'Tribune' reporter Paul Turnquest
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Turnquest, Tribune reporter:
Well, it seemed as if wherever she went, that was the story. And, you know, after doing it for so long, it almost becomes monotonous. With this, with these new pictures, it's sort of put a new twist on an old story. For us in the Bahamas it also brings an added flavour with the elections around the corner. It brings the idea of politics into the realm. So we have a celebrity, now deceased, our cabinet minister who granted her permanent residency rather quickly, and I mean it's just going to be interesting to see what's going to happen in the next few days.
7. Set-up of Cassius Stuart, leader Bahamas Democratic Movement Party
8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Cassius Stuart, leader Bahamas Democratic Movement
We believe Mr. Gibson's action is inappropriate, we believe that Mr. Gibson should be made accountable to the Bahamian people right now and to the international press as well. He needs to be to be responsible for his actions, his actions were was inappropriate. According to the Westminster form of government, when a minister files any action which is inappropriate, immediately he should step down. And right now Minister Gibson should step down. The Prime Minister should make him step down today.
9. Wide exterior of Horizons house
10. Close-up of Horizons
Miami Beach, Florida, US
11. Tilt down to set-up of Ned Bruck on boat
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ned Bruck, General Manager, Reel Deal Yachts:
Howard (Howard K. Stern, Anna Nicole Smith's lawyer and partner) was very professional, Anna seemed like a doll, she was a great lady she was happy that we were able to find her a boat that she was happy with.
13. Cutaway of Bruck on boat
14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ned Bruck, General Manager, Reel Deal Yachts:
They were preparing it to leave, provisioning it getting all the supplies that they needed and at that time Howard's cell phone rang and he got the devastating news that Anna Nicole had passed on. His reaction was a morbid look on his face and he said, 'gentlemen I have to leave' and left us.
15. Various of boat
NEW CONTROVERSY OVER ANNA NICOLE
Photographs of Anna Nicole Smith in bed embracing the Bahamian immigration minister who approved her application for permanent residency in The Bahamas have revived a political scandal in the islands, with one politician calling for the minister's resignation.
We believe Mr. Gibson's action is inappropriate, we believe that Mr. Gibson should be made accountable to the Bahamian people right now and to the international press as well said Cassius Stuart, leader of the Bahamas Democratic Movement, outside Smith's Nassau residence.
Two photographs published on the front page of The Tribune of Nassau on Monday showed Smith, who died on Thursday, and Immigration Minister Shane Gibson, both fully clothed, embracing on a bed decorated with pink flowers and a white ribbon.
In one of the photos, they look into each other's eyes, their faces only a couple of inches apart.
The newspaper which published the pictures, the Tribune, refused to say where they got the material from.
It's sort of put a new twist on an old story. For us in the Bahamas it also brings an added flavour with the elections around the corner. said reporter for the 'Tribune' newspaper, Paul Turnquest.
With general elections due this spring, many said the photographs, taken in Smith's bedroom, could damage the ruling party.
Former playboy model Anna Nicole was pronounced dead on Thursday.
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Ariel Harris, '13, Triggs International Fellow in History
Cornell Fellows Program
Site: Gerace Research Center & The National Archives of the Bahamas
Location: Nassau & San Salvador, Bahamas
Bahamians struggle to find work after Dorian
(14 Sep 2019) Jobs are scarce, savings are running low and money is barely trickling in.
As survivors of Hurricane Dorian enter week three of post-storm life, many in the northwestern Bahamas, known for its casinos, golf courses and mega yachts, worry they will be forced into deep poverty as they scramble to find work in the aftermath of the Category 5 storm that wreaked havoc on two islands.
I lost my job. I work with tourists, no tourist is on the island, Sheryl Russell, 56, who is a certified hair braider said.
As the northwestern Bahamas struggles to recover from Dorian, residents braced for newly formed Tropical Storm Humberto, which was expected to hit two islands over the weekend that were already battered by Dorian.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm was passing just east of Great Abaco island early Saturday and would bring heavy rains to the northwestern Bahamas.
In the months prior to the hurricane, the unemployment rate of the tourism-dependent Bahamas had decreased slightly, but stood at 10% on the archipelago of some 395,000 inhabitants.
On Grand Bahama it was 11% and had increased to 9% on nearby Abaco before Dorian slammed both islands, with people now trying to find any type of work after thousands lost their jobs.
It's unclear how many Bahamians affected by the hurricane have sought and obtained unemployment benefits, but the government has pledged to make it easier for evacuees to access those benefits.
The storm, however, has helped a handful of Bahamians.
It has created job opportunities for workers such as carpenters and construction crews.
Before the storm hit, the Bahamas had 32,000 people who were self-employed.
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Cleanup resumes in Bahamas as Humberto swirls away
(15 Sep 2019) Some residents in Grand Bahamas island on Saturday continued the cleaning and rebuilding efforts after a Category 5 storm slammed into the archipelago's northern region with winds in excess of 185 mph and severe flooding that toppled concrete walls and cracked trees in half as Dorian battered the area for a day and a half.
Entire streets in McLean's Town were filled with piles of rubble, homes with missing doors and windows, and old furniture strewn in lawns. Simeon Higgs, his wife and son were removing by hand the mess left by Dorian.
I'm prepared to repair, Higgs said.
Simeon Higgs is one of thousands of people beginning to return to salvage what few scraps they can from the devastation of Dorian, even as the dark storm clouds of Tropical Storm Humberto hovered above Saturday to remind them that the storm season has not yet passed.
In this case, at least, that was a break: Humberto narrowly missed the island and was projected to curve north and then northeast, staying well off of Florida's east coast.
By Sunday morning, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm was located about 135 miles (220 kilometers) north-northwest of Great Abaco Island and was moving at 7 mph (11 kph) north-northwest with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph (95 kph).
The U.S. National Hurricane Center said it would likely become a hurricane by Sunday night, but would remain far from the Bahamas and the U.S. coast by the time it reaches that strength.
Meanwhile on Saturday, Cecil Leathen, another local resident in McLean's Town, used heavy machinery to remove a boat that was on top of tree branches and mud.
Leathen, who works in construction, said he and his business partner plan to focus on rebuilding their properties, then assisting others nearby.
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We Took Football To The Bahamas!!!
The wait is over and there is nothing better than sweet sweet victory. Check out the ins and outs of our bowl game trip to the Bahamas and everything that went down!!!!
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