Malta Independent

Seven charged in court after raid on Chinese massage parlour

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Six women and one man have been charged with prostituti­onrelated offences after police raided a chain of Chinese massage parlours across the island.

Magistrate Natasha Galea Sciberras heard Vice Squad Inspector John Spiteri explain how police had investigat­ed complaints from a number of Mosta residents about a massage parlour in the town which might have been operating as a brothel. The investigat­ion, which later expanded to cover other outlets in Fgura, Birkirkara and Paola, led to the arrests of five women thought to be working as prostitute­s and the couple who employed them.

CCTV footage from the shops, contracept­ives and boxes containing bottles of baby oil seized from Belle Massage Parlours were brought to the courtroom.

First to be arraigned yesterday morning were Carmelo Sammut, 65, from Żabbar, and his Chinese wife Yanxia, 47. Inspector Spiteri told the court that the couple administer­ed the four massage parlours and that Sammut’s mobile phone contained CCTV footage of the brothels’ entrance halls, from which clients could be identified. Sammut told the police that the cameras were there to “deter illegal activity,” Spiteri said, but they also proved that he knew what was going on, he added. Permission for the destructio­n of the device and the footage it contained was requested, and obtained after the court was shown the footage.

The inspector said that women could be seen from the street, gyrating suggestive­ly in the entrance to the parlour as early as 5pm.

The Sammuts were charged with living off the earnings of prostituti­on, running a brothel and allowing his premises to be used as a brothel.

The Maltese man and his wife stood, arms crossed in the dock, as their lawyer Joe Giglio entered guilty pleas. The court warned the accused that they faced up to two years’ imprisonme­nt and a fine, but they did not change their pleas.

The accused had cooperated with the police, the court was told, the prosecutio­n confirming that that both accused had a clean criminal record and were first-time offenders.

Magistrate Galea Sciberras, in view of this, handed each accused a two-year prison sentence, suspended for four years, and a fine of €450.

Next to be called in were five Chinese women, aged 33 to 42. Lawyer Mark Mifsud Cutajar was appointed as legal aid to assist them as they could not afford a lawyer of their own choosing.

The inspector said the women had all been arrested on the various premises. The women, who entered Malta legally, were accused of participat­ing in the running of a brothel and loitering for the purposes of prostituti­on.

Asked, via an interprete­r, what they would be pleading, the women all replied that they were not guilty. The defence did not request bail at this stage and the women were remanded in custody.

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