Kuwait Times

Malta arrests 10 over journalist’s killing that shocked world

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VALLETTA: Maltese authoritie­s announced yesterday they have arrested 10 people in connection with the murder of a prominent journalist that sent shockwaves around the world. Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed in a car bomb attack on October 16, was one of the Mediterran­ean island’s most prominent public figures thanks to a widelyread blog she used to campaign against corruption. Her most explosive reports included allegation­s that members of Prime Minister Joseph Muscat’s inner circle benefited from kickbacks. But the 53-year-old also focused attention on alleged murky behavior by prominent opposition and business figures.

Speaking to reporters, the prime minister said a joint team of police, military and security services made the arrests following a near seven-week investigat­ion carried out with help from the FBI, Europol and Finnish intelligen­ce. Caruana Galizia’s murder triggered an outpouring of grief on Malta and an internatio­nal outcry over press freedom. It also turned an unflatteri­ng spotlight on the EU country’s problems with corruption and organised crime, both seen as having flourished against the backdrop of a booming economy.

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Muscat announced the arrest of eight of the suspects in a statement and then added in a tweet, that a further two had been detained. The statement said the suspects had been arrested on the basis of “reasonable suspicion in connection with involvemen­t in the murder” of Caruana Galizia. All the suspects were Maltese nationals, it said, noting that some were “known to police”.

Under Maltese law, they can be interrogat­ed for 48 hours before a decision on whether to prosecute them has to be made. Muscat would not divulge if the suspects included the alleged perpetrato­rs of the assassinat­ion, or those suspected of commission­ing it. Nor would he comment on the suspected motive, saying he did not want to go into any detail for fear of prejudicin­g a potential trial. The premier, who had described the slain journalist as his biggest adversary, reiterated his commitment to bringing her killers to justice. “As I stated as soon as I learnt about this barbaric act, we will leave no stone unturned to get this case solved,” he said. “I am committed to doing so more than ever.”

‘One-woman Wikileaks’ Muscat’s Labour Party government had offered a one million euro ($1.2 million) reward for informatio­n leading to a conviction of Caruana Galizia’s killers. Her sons had denounced the reward as a publicity stunt and called on Muscat to resign over the failings in the police and judiciary that contribute­d to their mother’s death and his attempts to silence her through legal suits when she was still alive.

The family have repeatedly expressed concern that her death will be explained away as a criminal murder and that any connection with her revelation­s about the island’s political elite will be swept under the carpet. In her final post on Running Commentary, the widely-read blog she had written since 2008, Caruana Galizia voiced despair over the cronyism and sleaze she saw engulfing her island nation. “There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate,” she wrote minutes before she died in a blast so powerful her car was blown to pieces and her body was catapulted into a nearby field.

Friends subsequent­ly revealed that she had feared she would be assassinat­ed but had been reluctant to accept police protection that would have restricted her reporting activity. A significan­t part of that had involved exposing what the massive Panama Papers data leak revealed about corruption at the highest levels of Maltese government. Earlier this year, online news site Politico included the journalist on a list of 28 public figures “shaping, shaking and stirring Europe,” describing her as “a one-woman WikiLeaks”. She is survived by her lawyer husband, Peter, and three sons.

 ??  ?? BIDNIJA: Police and forensic experts inspect the wreckage of a car bomb believed to have killed journalist and blogger Daphne Caruana Galizia close to her home in Bidnija, Malta, on October 16, 2017.— AFP
BIDNIJA: Police and forensic experts inspect the wreckage of a car bomb believed to have killed journalist and blogger Daphne Caruana Galizia close to her home in Bidnija, Malta, on October 16, 2017.— AFP

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