BAHAMAS EMBASSY IN D.C. “UNFIT FOR USE,” TRIBUNE ARTICLE CLAIMS

Located at 2220 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., in an area known as Embassy Row, The Bahamas Embassy building was purchased in 1974. The Embassy was  previously located in the Watergate Complex, a group of six buildings in the Foggy Bottom area, after The Bahamas became an independent nation in July of 1973.
FLASHBACK: The Bahamas National Children’s Choir and the National Boys’ Choir of The Bahamas, under the direction of the late Patricia Bazard (second from right), performed  at the Embassy of The Bahamas on Friday, July 15, 2016.

NASSAU, Bahamas — Bahamians living in the Washington DC area are upset about the dilapidated state of the Bahamas Embassy, deeming it unfit for people amid the COVID-19 pandemic, The Tribune, one of The Bahamas’ leading newspapers, reported on Friday, April 17.

In an article written by Tanya Smith-Cartwright, The Tribune noted: “There are complaints of mould infestation, broken crown mouldings, exposed pipes and leaking ceilings. Tribune sources in Washington say that for years the embassy has been in this state of disrepair and has escaped the ‘to do’ list of successive governments.

A source was quoted as saying: “As Bahamians living in this area we are totally embarrassed that our embassy looks the way it does. We are tired of complaining about how our embassy is not fit for humans to be (in). I am surprised that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has not sought to fix this building, after all it is owned by the government of the Bahamas. International guests cannot be greeted there because of the state of the building. It is deplorable.”

Minister of Foreign Affairs Darren Henfield

“The Bahamas Embassy is situated at 2220 Massachusetts Avenue, 6.North West, Washington, DC, an area known as Embassy Row. The property was purchased in 1974. It is approximately 100 years old and was originally a private home,” The Tribune’s article stated.

It added, “When contacted recently, Minister of Foreign Affairs Darren Henfield brushed off the concerns, and told this newspaper to contact the Bahamian ambassador in D.C.”

However, Foreign Affairs Minister Henfield was quoted as saying: “In our current environment right now, where we are managing crisis after crisis in this pandemic the world over, do you think this is the time to be entertaining something about the disrepair of an embassy? It is amazing to me that if Ambassador Collie, who works there, is aware of the existence of mould in his mission that he would not seek to remediate it. I know him better than that. There are several companies in the US that can do it. We had it done right here at (Ministry of) Foreign Affairs and in other places where we thought there was an existence of mould and we had it scrubbed.” See the full Tribune story at http://www.tribune242.com/news/2020/apr/17/bahamas-embassy-unfit-for-use/