Police arrest man suspected of killing woman found in canal

NASSAU, BAHAMAS — Police have identified the woman whose body was found in the South Beach canal Wednesday afternoon and have arrested a 34-year-old man in connection with her murder.

According to police, the victim has been positively identified as 42-year-old Yinka Maria Strachan of South Beach. 

Reports indicated that shortly after 3:30 pm on Wednesday, a group of men while swimming in the South Beach canal discovered the body of a female partially submerged in waters. As a result, the police were notified and responded to the discovery. The victim was retrieved and brought to shore by divers from the Marine Support Unit. Further examinations of the victim revealed that she received gunshot injuries to her upper body. 

Shortly after 1 pm yesterday police arrested a 34-year-old man in western New Providence in connection with Strachan’s murder.

Strachan’s murder follows the double murders of Allison Thompson and her 14-year-old daughter Trevornika Thompson. Police found their decomposing bodies locked inside their apartment on Ross Corner last Friday after they went there to investigate the source of a foul odor. Blake Strachan, 23, of Ross Corner has been charged with their murders. 

Women’s rights advocates have expressed serious concern over the recent killings and incidents of violence against females.

The Office of the Spouse of the Prime Minister in a recent statement expressed outrage at what it described as the “recent escalation” of gender-based violence against women and girls. Highlighting the recent homicides, the Office of the Spouse noted that recent events “speak to a sharp deterioration in relations between our men and women that threatens the country’s social stability,” and offered condolences to the families of the victims involved.

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In February 2015, the Registrar General Department entered into a contractual agreement with VRC, formerly known as Sunshine Shredder, to digitize its company files as part of a long-overdue transition from paper-based records to a modern, paperless system. The initial cost of the contract was a staggering $89,000 for the first month, followed by an ongoing monthly fee of $85,000. Notably, the agreement lacked a clearly defined project timeline or end date, raising immediate concerns about fiscal oversight and accountability. Tragically, while scanning commenced, the project quickly revealed an alarming absence of quality control and verification protocols. The digitization process, meant to enhance access, accuracy, and operational efficiency, was executed with such poor foresight that the resulting digital records are effectively unusable by the Company Section. The core issue lies in the contract specifications. VRC was commissioned to scan and input data into only three (3) fields, despite the operational requirement being six (6) fields for full functionality within the Department’s systems. This fundamental oversight rendered the digitized records incomplete and incompatible with current needs. Attempts to rectify this monumental error have proven financially unviable. Discussions to incorporate the additional fields revealed that doing so would triple the cost an egregious escalation with no guarantee of improved results. To make matters worse, in 2024, when the Registrar General’s office relocated to a new building, the internal scanning unit comprising trained staff who could have potentially salvaged or improved the process was dismantled. These personnel were reassigned to other departments, effectively dissolving any in-house capacity for quality control or intervention. This sequence of decisions paints a troubling picture of systemic mismanagement, questionable contractual negotiations, and a lack of strategic vision. The public deserves transparency, and those responsible for this financial and operational fiasco must be held to account. A project intended to usher in digital transformation has instead become a cautionary tale of waste and ineptitude at the expense of taxpayers and national record integrity.

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