The Jeep-drawn coffin of retired Commissioner of Police Bernard Kenneth Bonaby, is flanked by Senior Police Officers, March 8, following the service at St Francis Xavier Cathedral. (BIS Photo/Patrick Hanna)
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NASSAU, Bahamas -- Bernard
Kenneth Bonamy served on the police force for 38 years an
d over half of his life was dedicated to the preservation
of peace and the security of the nation, Prime Minister the Rt. Hon.
Perry G. Christie said.
The Prime Minister brought remarks at the Full Military
Funeral for retired Commissioner of Police Bernard Kenneth Bonamy, CMG,
LVO, QPM, LLB, CLE at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral, Friday, March 8,
2013.
The top brass of the country’s armed forces, members
of Cabinet and Members of Parliament attended the funeral for Mr. Bonamy
who passed away at the age of 67 on
February 22, 2013.
Governor General His Excellency Sir Arthur Foulkes
and Lady Foulkes; former Governors General the Hon. Arthur Hanna
and Sir Orville Turnquest; and senior government officials were also
in attendance.
Prime Minister Christie said, “For him, policing
was a calling, it was in him, and it was as Commissioner of Police that
B.K. made his most important contributions to policing and national
development.
“He ascended to the high office of Commissioner
during the extremely difficult years when narcotics trafficking and
associated criminality were at their height.
The Jeep-drawn coffin of retired Commissioner of Police Bernard Kenneth Bonaby, is flanked by Senior Police Officers, March 8, following the service at St Francis Xavier Cathedral. (BIS Photo/Patrick Hanna)
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“However, he brought to the fight against these
menaces an uncompromising integrity and incorruptibility which set the
standard for law enforcement officers at that time and for future generations
of law enforcers.”
The Prime Minister said, “He was a no-nonsense
police chief who insisted on discipline, professionalism, and service
with honour at all levels of the Royal Bahamas Police Force.”
Prime Minister Christie said a good education, was
always paramount to Mr. Bonamy and he had a love for it.
“During his career, he always pushed himself and
his fellow officers. He strove to be a good example for them,
showing himself to be incorruptible and proving to be a good leader.
His determination to be the best possible officer, led him to study
for his LL.B, which he was awarded in 1978. He became a lawman
who not only upheld the law, but one who intimately knew the law.”
The Prime Minister also noted that Mr. Bonamy had
the twin distinctions of being one of the youngest police commissioners
in the nation’s history and the longest serving in an Independent
Bahamas.
“He will also be remembered as a sound and innovative
thinker and law enforcement strategist.”
Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Perry G. Christie brings remarks during the Funeral for retired Commissioner of Police Bernard Kenneth Bonamy, at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral, Friday, March 8, 2013. (BIS Photo/Peter Ramsay)
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The Prime Minister said that along with the Minister
of National Security, at the time, the late Hon. Paul L. Adderley, Mr.
Bonamy was particularly instrumental in expanding and consolidating
the international working partnerships between Bahamian law enforcement
and their foreign counterparts, notably with the U.S. and British law
enforcement authorities, and on the global level, with INTERPOL.
The Prime Minister said Mr. Bonamy’s time as police
commissioner is marked as being one of reform and modernity.
He explained that under Mr. Bonamy’s leadership
the number of police stations in New Providence grew; he initiated the
Police Staff Association; the computerisation of the force began under
his leadership and he implemented many crime strategies that were new
to the force.
“He sought to make the Royal Bahamas Police Force
one of the best in the region. His eye for talent, led him to
make good choices and place officers in departments where they could
shine and gain more experience.
Senior Police Officers transport the coffin of retired Commissioner of Polioce Bernard Kenneth Bonamy into the graveyard at Lakeview Memorial Gardens for burial, March 8. following the service at St Francis Xavier Cathedral. (BIS Photo/Patrick Hanna)
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Prime Minister Christie said, “This meant that
there was not only an improved, more efficient police force, but officers
who were genuinely happy serving in their areas of talent or expertise.”
For stellar service to his country, Mr. Bonamy received
many awards. In 1985, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II bestowed
the Lieutenant of the Victorian Order on him and in 2000, he received
the prestigious Queen’s Police Medal. He is also a Companion
The Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George.
After retiring, he continued to give distinguished
service as Secretary to the Gaming Board, and in more recent times as
a practicing member of the Bahamas Bar.
Mr. Bonamy is survived by his wife Shirley, six sons
and two daughters and numerous grandsons and granddaughters.
Bahamas Police Commissioner Greenslade calls Bonamy a great role model