The Peterborough Examiner

Sons speak out on journalist’s killing

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VALLETTA, Malta — The sons of slain investigat­ive journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia have called on the Maltese prime minister to resign.

In a Facebook post Thursday, they said Joseph Muscat should take political responsibi­lity for “failing to uphold our fundamenta­l freedoms.”

The sons, Matthew, Andrew and Paul Caruana Galizia, said they weren’t endorsing Muscat’s call for a reward to lead to their mother’s assassins, saying “we are not interested in justice without change.”

“We are not interested in a criminal conviction, only for the people in government who stood to gain from our mother’s murder to turn around and say that justice has been served,” they said.

Caruana Galizia, a harsh critic of Muscat and who reported extensivel­y on corruption on Malta, was killed by a car bomb on Monday.

Her sons wrote that identifyin­g their mother’s assassins was not enough. Corruption on the Mediterran­ean island nation also needed to be rooted out, they said.

Muscat has denounced the assassinat­ion, and has proposed a reward to find her killers.

On Thursday, some 200 journalist­s held an event in support of the slain journalist.

A group representi­ng journalist — the Institute of Maltese Journalist­s — has filed a court case seeking to ensure source confidenti­ality on all data that is lifted from Caruana Galizia’s computers and mobile phones during the investigat­ion.

Investigat­ors, meanwhile, were looking at similariti­es with other car bombings in Malta over the last two years — six in all including Caruana Galizia’s. None have been solved.

Former police commission­er John Rizzo told the Malta

Independen­t that it appears that mobile detonated explosives were used in each of the six bombings since the start of 2016, which caused four deaths and two serious injuries. The previous victims were all known to police, the paper said.

Muscat defended the failure to solve the rash of car bombings as he left parliament Wednesday evening. Including the last six, there have been more than 30 in the last 15 years on the island.

“I will continue to defend the institutio­ns and I am a firm believer in the institutio­ns,” he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Daphne Caruana Galizia, the Maltese investigat­ive journalist who exposed her nation’s links with the so-called Panama Papers, was killed on Monday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Daphne Caruana Galizia, the Maltese investigat­ive journalist who exposed her nation’s links with the so-called Panama Papers, was killed on Monday.

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