The Borneo Post

Police believe journalist probably killed by remotely detonated bomb

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VALLETTA: Police believe a bomb that killed a prominent journalist in Malta was attached beneath her car and triggered remotely, a government spokeswoma­n said on Thursday, giving the first details of the investigat­ion.

Daphne Caruana Galizia, a renowned blogger and fierce critic of the government, died on Monday in a blast that wrecked her car as she was leaving her house, throwing debris and body parts into a nearby field.

The murder shocked the Mediterran­ean island, the smallest nation in the European Union, and Prime Minister Joseph Muscat on Wednesday promised a reward to anyone who came forward with informatio­n about the killing.

However, Caruana Galizia’s three grown- up sons dismissed the offer, and called instead for Muscat to resign, saying he should take political responsibi­lity for the first such murder of a journalist in Malta since the island won independen­ce in 1964. Muscat has ruled out quitting and flew to Brussels on Thursday for an EU summit, where his spokeswoma­n said investigat­ors were making some progress.

“Emerging evidences make us think that the bomb was placed under the car and was set off with a remote trigger,” she said, adding that foreign experts would be called on to help identify the mobile phone which was used to detonate the bomb.

In a news conference in Valletta, police commission­er Lawrence Cutajar denied British police would join Dutch forensic experts and a team from the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion ( FBI) in helping with the case. Muscat’s spokeswoma­n earlier said British officers would be involved.

Cutajar said no arrests had made so far and added it was too soon to discuss possible motives, telling reporters it would take weeks to collect all the evidence. He also could not confirm reports from a Maltese police source that Semtex explosives were believed to have been used in the killing.

The island has seen a number of small bomb attacks in recent years tied to gangland criminals, but the explosives used were relatively rudimentar­y and did not have the same power as the device that targeted Caruana Galizia.

The 53-year- old journalist used her widely read blog to lambast Muscat, his wife and some of his closest advisers, accusing them of setting up off- shore accounts to hide ill-gotten gain.

They denied the charges and Muscat was suing Caruana Galizia for libel at the time of her death.

“The police may or may not find out who ordered the assassinat­ion of our mother but as long as those who led the country to this point remain in place, none of it will matter,” her three sons, Matthew, Andrew and Paul, wrote on Facebook. — Reuters

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