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  • 29
    Jan
    2013
    11:11am, EST

    Bahamas voters reject bid to legalize gambling

    By Jeff Todd, The Associated Press

    NASSAU, Bahamas -- Voters on Monday overwhelmingly rejected a referendum to legalize gambling for citizens of the Bahamas, where locals are already barred from betting in casinos at the islands' tourist resorts. 

    AFP/Getty Images file

    A tourist plays in a casino at a resort in Nassau, Bahamas. Locals are barred from betting in casinos at the islands' tourist resorts.

    Underground gambling operations called "web shops" where Bahamians bet on numbers in televised U.S. lotteries have become commonplace in recent years. The shops operate in violation of Bahamian law, but police and political leaders have largely turned a blind eye to them for years.

    In a two-part referendum, voters were asked whether gambling shops on the archipelago off Florida's east coast should be legalized, regulated and taxed, and if the government should create its own national lottery. 

    But election officials said that a majority of Bahamians clearly voted no on both questions, forcing the government to start the arduous task of shutting down dozens of the underground operations. Voter turnout was apparently quite low.

    Bradley Roberts, chairman of the ruling party, said late Monday that Prime Minister Perry Christie's government recognized the results. Christie's administration had encouraged citizens to support legalizing the gambling shops, arguing that the underground houses employ a few thousand Bahamians and could generate $20 million a year in taxes if they were regulated.

    "The prime minister was clear that his government would be guided by the results of the referendum and the will of the people, notwithstanding the low voter turnout," Roberts said. "The people have spoken."

    The islands' powerful church lobby and the political opposition fiercely opposed any legalized betting for locals. Religious leaders were thrilled by the measure's defeat.

    "This is a victory for the church," said Dr. Ranford Patterson, head of the country's powerful Christian Council. "We are excited and thanking God."

    Karen Demeritte, a 51-year-old administrative assistant, said she voted against legalizing gambling because she believed that the societal costs would far outweigh the benefit to tax coffers in the Caribbean country of about 350,000 inhabitants.

    "We have not given any kind of thought to the downside and the social ills attached to gambling," she said.

    Rick Lowe, general manager of a car dealership in Nassau, countered that various forms of gambling are clearly widespread on the islands and adults should be able to spend their money as they see fit.

    "Society has passively approved it. It is impossible to stop gambling," said Lowe, who said he declined to vote.

     

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    9 comments

    A developing country as small as the Bahamas can not grow with a device such as gambling. The people know that for every winner there are many more losers. A collection of losers would strain a country with 300,00 persons.

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    Explore related topics: travel, world, life, americas, gambling, caribbean, bahamas, featured
  • 22
    Nov
    2012
    11:07pm, EST

    Bahamas helicopter crash kills American; property magnate survives

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    NASSAU, Bahamas -- One American was killed and four people were injured when a helicopter crashed near an exclusive resort in the Bahamas on Thursday afternoon, according to local police.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The helicopter went down at Baker's Bay Golf and Ocean Club on Great Guana Cay in the Abacos island chain, according to Superintendent Noel Curry at the Marsh Harbour police station.

    The Miami Herald identified one of the survivors as Jeffrey Soffer, head of the Miami-based Turnberry Associates, a leading property firm. Turnberry owns the famed but financially troubled Fontainebleau resort in Miami Beach as well as condominiums in Las Vegas, the Bahamas and Washington D.C.


    The newspaper reported that, according to a Soffer family source, the person who died was the helicopter’s owner, a businessman who lived in the Bahamas, and the others on board were an unidentified woman, the pilot and a person who works with Soffer. They were headed to the Bahamas for Thanksgiving. Authorities did not identify any of the victims.

    The Herald, citing the family source, said Soffer walked away from crash with bruises but no serious injuries. The three passengers were flown back to the United States by private jet, Reuters reported. The Herald reported that the Soffer family source said Soffer was taken to the University of Miami Hospital for evaluation. 

    The helicopter was attempting to land when it was buffeted by a wind gust and the pilot lost control, according to the Nassau Guardian newspaper.

    Eyewitnesses said the helicopter's rotor blades hit the ground near the Baker's Bay townhomes. The co-pilot was killed by the blades, and the pilot suffered serious injuries.

    The Bahamian Minister of Transport and Aviation, Glenys Hanna-Martin, said a full investigation into the crash was being launched.

    Baker's Bay is a luxury resort about 150 miles off Florida's southeast coast with an oceanfront golf course and private beach club, according to its website.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    5 comments

    Only one American, Damn, if it could have only been Americans.

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  • 28
    Jan
    2012
    12:35pm, EST

    Man falls to death aboard cruise ship in Bahamas

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    Authorities are investigating the death of a passenger aboard the Carnival Fantasy who fell from an upper deck to a lower deck while the cruise ship was docked in the Bahamas.

    The 26-year-old victim, whose identity was not released, fell from one of the upper levels of the ship's atrium to the lobby level late Friday night,  Carnival Cruise Lines said in a statement Saturday. The ship was docked in Nassau at the time.

    Bahamas police said the man was from South Carolina and that initial reports indicate he may have jumped. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

    The ship was cleared by authorities to sail Saturday morning, but because of the delay due to the investigation a scheduled visit to Freeport was canceled.      

    Carnival Fantasy was sailing on a five-day Bahamas cruise that departed Charleston, S.C., on Wednesday and is scheduled to return to Charleston on Monday.

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    • Doubts cast over Yale QB's Rhodes honor

    434 comments

    Are they sure it was a passenger or did the captain of the ship trip and fell overboard?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cruise-ship, carnival, bahamas

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