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BAHAMAS: The Press Club Media Awards – Meet The Nominees

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#Nassau, November 6, 2018 – Bahamas – The best in Bahamian media would be recognized for their hard work and dedication in the field of journalism and mass communications, during The Bahamas Press Club Media Awards scheduled for Saturday, November 10, 2018.

The Black Tie, Red Carpet event will be held in the Governor’s Ballroom at the British Colonial Hilton, under the Patronage of Her Excellency the Most Hon Dame Marguerite Pindling, Governor General of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas.

This year’s theme is: “Celebrating 45 Years of Bahamian Media 1973-2018”, and Title Sponsor is IL Cares Foundation and Verizon Media Group. Other major sponsors are Aliv, Sunshine Holdings Ltd. Royal Fidelity, ZNS, The Nassau Guardian, The Tribune, The Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) and many other supporters of Bahamian media.

The night’s top award is The Etienne Dupuch Lifetime Achievement Award and the recipient is veteran broadcaster and owner of Island FM, Sir Charles Carter. The Pioneer Award goes to Ivan Johnson, Publisher of The Punch and The Press Club Person of The Year will be revealed at the awards ceremony, as well as The People’s Choice Award being voted online by the public.

 

CATEGORIES & NOMINEES

 

Best Cinematography Award

  1. Eyewitness news – Eyewitness News – Sentenced to suffer
  2. Andrew Burrows – Ministry of Agriculture – We can feed ourselves ( North Andros & Long Island)

 

Best Editing for Television News Story

  1. Terran Knowles – NB 12 – Tradewinds

 

Best Editing for Television News Story or Documentary

  1. Andrew Burrows – Ministry of Agriculture – Can We Feed Ourselves – Abaco

 

Best Newscast

  1. Clint Watson – Eyewitness News – Labour day newscast

 

Best Producer Award – Packaged

  1. Apryl Sands and Shameko Gilbert – Eyewitness News – Autism: Special Place for Special People
  2. Clint Watson – Eyewitness News – Newscast Oct 4 Beyond the Headlines
  3. Andrew Burrows – Ministry of Agriculture – Can We Feed Ourselves – North Andros
  4. Genea Noel-Ferguson & Kendeno Knowles – Eyewitness News – Newscast October 1st – Cancer Registry Long Overdue

 

Best Television Documentary

  1. Deandre Williamson – ZNS – A history of Fox Hill
  2. Andrew Burrows – Ministry of Agriculture – Can We Feed Ourselves (Long Island & Abaco)
  3. Eyewitness News – Sentenced to Suffer
  4. Carla Palmer – ZNS – Agriculture Now
  5. Jerome Sawyer – REV TV- Lifeline to Crooked Island

 

Best Television News Story

  1. Jasmine Brown – NB12/Nassau Guardian – Phenton Neymour Shares Cancer Battle
  2. Kyle Walkine – Nassau Guardian – Johnathon’s Prom Night
  3. Deandre Williamson – ZNS – Shantytown Eviction Deadline Update
  4. Apryl Sands – Eyewitness News – Shanty Town Residents
  5. Genea Noel-Ferguson – Eyewitness News -Ashes or Dirt?
  6. Sancheska Brown – Eyewitness News – Girl Needs Help
  7. Theo Sealy – Eyewitness News- Child Murdered in Cross Fire

 

Best Video Editing Award

  1. Rossano Deal – Nassau Guardian – Special Needs Prom Night
  2. Rossano Deal – Nassau Guardian – Minnis to address the OBAN issue
  3. P Giovanni Armbrister – Eyewitness News – Tyler’s Place
  4. Shemako/Shamiko Gilbert – Eyewitness News – Labour Day Family Victim Mourns
  5. Agatha Christie – Eyewitness News – Johnson Prepares for Fight

 

Bursell Brandshaw Press Photographer of the Year

  1. Torrell Glinton – Nassau Guardian – Munning Road Vigil
  2. Eric Rose – BIS – Youth and Culture in The Park A Hit in St. Barnabas
  3. Eric Rose – BIS – Coverage of E. Clement Bethel Arts Festival
  4. Elizabeth Bryan – The Eleutheran -The Eleutheran

 

Cyril Stevenson  Award for Outstanding Political Journalism

  1. Vaughnique Toote – NB12- Minnis on Oban BPC Report

 

Kenneth Nathaniel Francis Award for Newspaper Design and Composition

  1. Ayhisha Small-Cleare – The Nassau Guardian
  2. Vernal Bryan – Volume 11, Issue 9 – The Eleutheran Newspaper
  3. The Tribune – The Tribune

 

Leon Turnquest Award for Sports Print Journalism

  1. Sheldon Longley -The Nassau Guardian – We’ve Come a Long Way in The Men’s 400m
  2. Sheldon Longley – The Nassau Guardian – Steven, Shaunae shine in Shanghai
  3. Renaldo Dorsett – 10 Year Seniors – The Legend of Deandre Ayton: Part II
  4. Renaldo Dorsett – 10 Year Seniors – There Can Only Be One
  5. Simba French – The Nassau Guardian – A breakdown of The Bahamas’ medals at CARIFTA
  6. Simba French – The Nassau Guardian – Unstoppable

 

Leslie Higgs Feature Writer of the Year

  1. Rogan Smith – The Punch – Now, Let Me Be More Pacific, How To Avoid Getting Catfished In Classified Ads
  2. Sloan Smith – The Nassau Guardian- We Wanted the Death Penalty
  3. Cara Hunt – The Tribune – Shaunae Miller and Natajia Miller interviews
  4. Elizabeth Bryan – The Eleutheran – An Eleutheran Profile: Dorothy Elaine, Neely Rahming

 

Outstanding Sports Broadcast Journalism

  1. Randy Smith – Eyewitness news – Johnson Preparing for Fight
  2. Amajahl Knowles – ZNS – Klay, Mychal Thompson speak about Giving Back

 

  1. Anthony White Columnist of the Year
  2. Inigo ‘Naughty’ Zenicazelaya – A Comic’s View: Dey Can’ Be Serious With This Political BS
  3. Inigo ‘Naughty’ Zenicazelaya – A Comic’s View: Left In The Dark – Again
  4. Rogan Smith – All Fun And Jokes Aside, To Beat Or Not To Beat
  5. Felicity Ingraham – A Blind Love
  6. Felicity Ingraham – Face to Face

 

Social Media Award of the Year

  1. Hadassah Deleveaux – Blog – Over The Hill…The Other Side
  2. Timothy Bain – 2018 Deandre Ayton NBA Draft Recap
  3. Ras De’Niro Thompson – YSC PR – Current Affairs Podcast

 

Student Media Journalism Award

  1. Kenton Hepburn – UB TV – Sherwood Rahming
  2. Laurencis Smith – UB TV – Ken Mullings
  3. Leah Cooper, Andrea Darville, Berthony McDermott, Jade Bethel – UBTV – UB Grad Day
  4. Ginelle Longley – Eyewitness News – Eyewitness News

 

Website of the Year

  1. Rogan Smith – Blog
  2. Spice Media Group – The Eleutheran
  3. Eyewitness News

 

Tickets are $150 per person.

Contact

To learn more, please contact:

Lindsay Thompson

Secretary

242-434-5643

For more about the Bahamas Press Club 2014, visit www.bahamaspressclub.org

Facebook: The Bahamas Press Club 2014

 

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Next U.S. Ambassador?  Walker Pledges Business-Driven Approach as U.S. Looks to Counter China in The Bahamas

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Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

The Bahamas, September 16, 2025 – For the first time since 2011, the United States is on the cusp of sending an ambassador to The Bahamas — and the nominee, former football star turned entrepreneur Herschel Walker, is promising to bring his business instincts to the diplomatic table.

Speaking before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week, Walker underscored that his background in food-service companies and small business leadership has prepared him to think practically about investment. “I know how to run a business, how to create jobs, how to make payroll. Those lessons translate into building relationships and building trust,” Walker said.

Walker, who was nominated by President Trump in December 2024, faced the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on September 11. As of now, he has not yet been confirmed; his nomination remains under review, pending a committee vote before it can move to the full Senate. If approved, he would become the first U.S. ambassador to The Bahamas since 2011.

For years, U.S. officials have stressed security and counternarcotics cooperation with The Bahamas, including through “Operation Bahamas, Turks and Caicos.” But in areas like infrastructure, medical care, and long-term investment, Washington has often been absent.

Hospitals and clinics remain under-resourced, and hurricane recovery has been slow in many islands. Chinese state-backed firms, by contrast, have shown up with financing packages and construction deals — a presence that has raised alarms on Capitol Hill.

“Only 50 miles off our shore, The Bahamas is too important for us to ignore,” warned Senate Foreign Relations Committee leaders during Walker’s hearing. They called China’s inroads “strategic, not charitable,” suggesting Beijing’s long game is about ports, proximity, and political leverage.

Walker positioned himself as a nontraditional but pragmatic envoy. He argued that his business career, rooted in private sector success, equips him to champion American investment in The Bahamas.

He pledged to:

  • Promote U.S. companies interested in medical and infrastructure projects.
  • Support an environment that encourages American investors to see The Bahamas as more than just a beach destination.
  • Highlight opportunities for partnerships that improve public services, healthcare, and resilience against hurricanes.

“I’ve built businesses. I know what it takes to attract investors and create opportunity. That is exactly what I intend to bring to our relationship with The Bahamas,” Walker said.

The Bahamas is not just a tourist paradise. It’s a frontline state in migration, drug interdiction, and hurricane response. More than six million U.S. visitors travel there annually, making stability and safety a U.S. domestic concern as much as a foreign policy one.

And yet, with the ambassador post vacant for 14 years, the U.S. has often looked detached — opening space for China’s ambitious Belt and Road agenda. The fear is that infrastructure deals signed today could give Beijing leverage in the region tomorrow.                                                                                                                                                                                                                Walker’s confirmation would symbolize a course correction, signaling Washington’s intent to re-engage not only in security but in the economic future of The Bahamas.                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Not everyone is convinced Herschel Walker is the right man for the job. His nomination revived controversies from his 2022 Senate run, including past allegations, public gaffes, and doubts about whether he has the diplomatic polish the post demands. Some senators and analysts questioned whether celebrity and business experience were enough for a role requiring nuance in foreign policy and geopolitics.

Critics argued that The Bahamas, sitting just 50 miles from Florida and facing intense Chinese interest, deserves a seasoned diplomat rather than a political ally.

Walker confronted those doubts head-on. “People have underestimated me all my life — in academics, athletics, and business,” he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “And I have always proven them wrong, through discipline, determination, and by outworking everyone.”

He admitted he had never served as an ambassador but countered that his career prepared him in other ways: building businesses, managing payrolls, and connecting with people from all walks of life. He framed his business background as a strength, promising to use it to encourage U.S. investment in healthcare, infrastructure, and hurricane resilience projects in The Bahamas.

Rather than sparring with critics, Walker leaned on confidence and persistence: “I know how to build trust and find common ground. That’s what this relationship needs.”

If confirmed, Walker would have to balance his role as diplomat with expectations of being a commercial cheerleader for U.S. firms. His emphasis on entrepreneurship suggests a willingness to push U.S. businesses toward opportunities in healthcare, ports, and post-storm reconstruction — areas where Bahamians say they need the most support.

For Bahamian officials, the question will be whether Washington is prepared to back words with financing. U.S. private sector dollars, paired with aid and development partnerships, could help shift the tide against Chinese influence.

For Walker, the test will be whether his business acumen can translate into diplomatic wins — giving Bahamians alternatives to Beijing, while deepening the U.S. role in the Caribbean.

Analysis: If Walker delivers, this appointment could mark a turning point: a U.S. strategy that recognizes that in the Caribbean, investment is diplomacy.

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Conflicting Reports as Grand Bahama Awaits Its New Airport: What to Believe?

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Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

September 16, 2025 – Grand Bahama’s wait for a modern international airport has taken another dramatic turn. Just days after reports surfaced that the $200 million redevelopment had collapsed because partners failed to secure financing, the government is now insisting the project is alive and well — with funding in the “final stages” and construction on the horizon.

Earlier This Week: Airport Deal in Dire Straits

The week began with grim headlines. Deputy Prime Minister and Aviation Minister Chester Cooper confirmed that private partners in the much-heralded consortium had not produced financing. “Regrettably, the funding had not happened,” he admitted, sparking widespread fears the deal had crumbled.

Those admissions triggered a storm of skepticism in Freeport. Back in February, the government had declared the airport deal “finalized,” naming Aerodrome Ltd., Manchester Airport Group, and BHM UK as partners. They promised demolition within 30 days, designs in 45 days, and a new terminal by year’s end. But now, more than four months later, not a single milestone has been delivered.

For residents and business leaders, the collapse narrative confirmed their worst fears: that Grand Bahama was once again being strung along with empty promises. Long-stay tourism — the kind that sustains hotels, restaurants, taxis, and shops — depends on a functioning airport. Without it, the island’s economy remains hobbled.

Today: Government Pushes Back

But late Thursday, the government issued a forceful rebuttal. “The redevelopment of Grand Bahama’s International Airport remains a central priority for this administration and is key to the island’s economic renewal,” the statement read. Officials stressed that they are “in the final stages of securing funding and concluding agreements on airport management.”

The statement went further, clarifying the role of Manchester Airport Group, the UK’s largest airport manager. MAG, it said, was never meant to provide financing but remains a core partner in shaping the airport’s development and management. Bahamian contractors, the government insisted, are part of the team tasked with delivering the facility. “Our focus is on results,” the release concluded. “Grand Bahama will have the airport it needs to grow, attract investment, and strengthen its role as a gateway to The Bahamas.”

Who Should Grand Bahama Believe?

The conflicting narratives — one of a deal in “dire straits,” the other of a project in “final stages” — have left Grand Bahama residents struggling to know what to believe. Is the airport project truly on life support, or is the government simply playing its hand close until funding details are nailed down?

Skeptics point out that this is hardly the first time the airport has been declared a priority only to see little follow-through. Promises in 2023, in February 2025, and again in summer 2025 all failed to produce visible progress. Each missed deadline has chipped away at public trust.

Supporters of the government counter that large infrastructure projects are inherently complex, with legal negotiations and financing arrangements often dragging longer than planned. They argue that the continued involvement of Manchester Airport Group is evidence the project is still credible.

The Bigger Picture

Grand Bahama’s airport troubles are intertwined with the stalled $120 million Grand Lucayan hotel sale, which also remains without visible progress 129 days after it was announced. Business leaders insist both projects must move together if the island is to see real recovery. A luxury resort without a modern airport is as unviable as an airport without hotel rooms to fill.

For now, the people of Grand Bahama are left in limbo. This week they were told the airport deal had failed. Today, they’re being told it’s moving forward. The only certainty is that, nearly a year after the latest round of promises, not a single crane has touched the sky.

As one resident put it: “We don’t need more statements. We need to see bulldozers.”

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U.S. Coast Guard Trains Bahamian Partners in Water Survival Skills

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The Bahamas, September 10, 2025 – Rescue swimmers from the United States Coast Guard (USCG) Aviation Training Center in Mobile, Alabama visited Nassau to train Royal Bahamas Defense Force (RBDF) and Royal Bahamas Police Force (RBPF) members in water survival skills as part of Operation Bahamas Turks and Caicos (OPBAT) earlier this week.

“Training alongside our USCG partners ensures our personnel are best prepared for the unique challenges of joint operations” said Superintendent Wendy Pearson, Commander Drug Enforcement Unit.

The multi-day exercise, centered on the USCG’s Shallow Water Egress Training (SWET), enhanced the safety and preparedness of Bahamian partners who routinely operate aboard USCG helicopters during OPBAT missions. The exercise provided hands-on instruction for 31 participants and strengthened interoperability between U.S. and Bahamian agencies engaged in counter-drug, search and rescue, and maritime security operations throughout the region.

“We were excited and proud to have the opportunity to share our expertise with our Bahamian partners. Not only did RBDF and RBPF perform exceptionally well, they exceeded the standards we set for the event,” said Petty Officer Second Class Cole Johnson, USCG.

OPBAT is a cooperative multi-agency international operation supporting The Bahamas and Turks & Caicos Islands to stop illicit drug smuggling through the region. U.S. Embassy Nassau Chargé d’affaires Kimberly Furnish stated, “Since 1982, OPBAT has worked to stop the flow of illicit narcotics through the Caribbean, destined for the United States or other jurisdictions.  This is international cooperation at its best.”

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