‘Deputy PM unfit for office’

By DENISE MAYCOCK

Tribune Freeport Reporter

dmaycock@tribunemedia.net

PLP Leader Philip “Brave” Davis criticised Deputy Prime Minister Peter Turnquest over the termination of internet service for months at the Sweeting’s Cay Primary School in his constituency of East Grand Bahama.

Mr Davis said the minister of finance is “unfit” for office.

Mr Davis travelled to East End on Friday when he, along with Senators Fred Mitchell and Michael Darville, took a ferry to nearby Sweeting’s Cay as part of his two-day visit to Grand Bahama.

“I was deep in Peter Turnquest’s East End seat yesterday, and I am telling you now he is unfit for service,” he told persons at a rally in Eight Mile Rock on Saturday.

The PLP leader stated that while at the primary school he learned that the school’s internet service had allegedly been terminated for lack of payment by the government.

“Internet service off for months now,” he said. “The government has failed to pay for the service. You think Peter Turnquest or Jeffery Lloyd concerned about the education of children? Now how do you do that to your constituents?”

Pointing out that some $1.7bn was borrowed in ten months, Mr Davis said children lack the basic services of the country when it comes to education.

Touching on the controversial subject of the Oban Energies deal in East Grand Bahama, Mr Davis said he wanted to know who is behind the company.

“There is a company called Clean Marine. I want to know whether the mystery man or woman is associated with Clean Marine and what Clean Marine’s role might be in this Oban deal,” he said.

“I will leave it there for now. But I am going to ask this - what are you hiding, prime minister?”

The FNM government signed a heads of agreement with Oban Energies for a proposed $5.5bn oil refinery and storage terminal to be developed on 600 acres of Crown Land in East Grand Bahama. But, the project has received much opposition from environmental groups which believe it would damage the natural pristine environment and beaches of East End.

Meanwhile, Mr Davis said the PLP was hard at work on Grand Bahama and had opened the Memories Hotel, and started major capital works projects to build the fire station, fixing Fishing Hole Road, and beginning construction of schools and clinics on the island during its last term in office.

He said the party was also working on increased airlift out of North America, and the implementation of the Grand Bahama Shipyard’s Employment Programme.

He said the shipyard programme was designed by the PLP to get Grand Bahamians back to work.

“Your PLP government, along with the port subsidised initiative, was focused on training some 200 Bahamians starting in 2016, and 600 Bahamians over the next four years. We aimed to deliver real job opportunities to you to put our people back to work,” he said.

Mr Davis claimed the FNM allowed the programme to collapse while alleging scores of foreign workers were coming to work at the GB Shipyard.

“This week some 500 foreign workers landed on Grand Bahama,” he alleged. “And where is the government? Don’t they want residents in communities of Eight Mile Rock to work?”

However, Minister of Labour Dion Foulkes pushed back at the assertion, saying he had no information on his desk in reference to this, while accusing Mr Davis of being irresponsible.

“I have absolutely no knowledge about that, I do not know where he got that from,” Mr Foulkes told The Tribune. “There has been no application before the Department of Labour for work permits (of that amount) for the shipyard.

“On average we get 10-15 applications a week, if there is a big job ... there may be more, but they are normally for limited periods for three to four weeks. It’s very irresponsible of him (Mr Davis), I don’t know who told him that – being the (leader of the) Official Opposition, he should check his facts,” Mr Foulkes said.

While in Grand Bahama, Mr Davis also claimed all the FNM has delivered in one year are witch hunts to hurt people, no real investment, victimisation and intimidation.

“They delivered mass unemployment, sending home scores of workers across the country. And while doing that on Grand Bahama in particular, foreigners are coming in to take your jobs in the shipyard,” he claimed.

Mr Davis called on PLPs to band together and to encourage their friends and neighbours to join the PLP party.

“We are retooling our vision, image, and message - VIM I call it. It is a programme we are working on to have a battle-ready political machine,” Mr Davis said.

The PLP leader also said the party has begun the process of reforming its constitution to make it relevant and modern.

Comments

DDK says...

Brave Davis is simply unfit FULL STOP.

Posted 7 May 2018, 3:46 p.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

But he has a point ........ How can a school not have access to (BTC) internet, today?????? ....... This is BTC country!!! ........ The Government owns 49(+2)% of it ........ No excuses except technical difficulties ......... Then we have ALIV who is anxious to make a name for itself.

Posted 7 May 2018, 5:52 p.m. Suggest removal

TigerB says...

Brave is a knuckle head who forgets so easily. Sad he still has followers. which is worst, Internet or the power? You decide.

Posted on 26 June 2014. by Jones Bahamas

Members of the Free National Movement (FNM) on Wednesday claimed that the lights were cut off to all public schools in Grand Bahama after the government allegedly did not pay the bills.

According to a press statement issued by FNM Member of Parliament for Central Grand Bahama and Shadow Minister of Public Works Neko Grant the government-run school on that island are now all in darkness.

“Despite all their slick and fancy talk about a streamlined process and consolidation of balances to improve efficiency in the 2014/2015 national budget, this administration still can’t do something as simple as pay the light bills so that the electricity stays on in the Grand Bahama schools,” he said.

“The people of Grand Bahama deserve more and they deserve better.”

Mr. Grant also lashed out at Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Perry Christie over the matter.

“The Christie government has consistently proven themselves to be incapable of doing basic administrative functions. It is no wonder that large scale projects they brag about cannot get off the ground in any meaningful way,” he said.

A Free National Movement parliamentary team in Grand Bahama reported to the party that power was disconnected at all government schools.

The team said that the disconnection is to be blamed on non-payment and called the fiasco “an absolute disgrace.”
Journal reporters were able to speak with National Chairman of the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) Bradley Roberts who said up to that time he had not heard anything of the incident.

“I just spoke with someone from Grand Bahama and they did not say anything to me,” he said.

Numerous calls were also made to Member of Parliament for West Grand Bahama and Bimini Obie Wilchcombe, Minister of Education Jerome Fitzgerald, the Director of Education Lionel Sands, the Bahamas Union of Teachers President Belinda Wilson, including several schools in Grand Bahama and the Grand Bahama Power Company; none of whom were available to make comment.

Posted 7 May 2018, 7:40 p.m. Suggest removal

CatIslandBoy says...

I wonder if Brave knows, or even cares, that there are schools in Cat Island without internet access?

Posted 7 May 2018, 10:27 p.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

BOL ........... Brave is one stupid fool ........ PLPs should be ashamed of him.

Posted 8 May 2018, 3:47 p.m. Suggest removal

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