The Malta Independent on Sunday

Serenity – the misnomer of the year

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‘Serene’ is how the Prime Minister describes his state of mind of late, but the body language and the events sweeping across the country, the statement tells another story altogether.

The hysterical reactions of government acolytes and pundits, who have gone to extraordin­ary lengths to discredit a woman who blew the whistle on the financial machinatio­ns underway at Pilatus Bank, which she divulged freely and voluntaril­y to the ongoing magisteria­l inquiry, belie this ‘serene’ dispositio­n being so falsely projected.

The general sentiment reigning over the populace, over the Prime Minister’s supporters and opponents alike, a feeling that is virtually palatable anywhere you go, also belies the fact that no leader of a country can possibly be of a serene mind when those he is leading are in such a tumultuous state.

The allegation­s that have captured the national attention over the last year and over the last 10 days in particular, are no ordinary allegation­s.

The Prime Minister is facing very serious charges of being personally linked to corruption and money laundering. Now whether those allegation­s are true or not is irrelevant in this context. Either which way, no Prime Minister can be in any sort of serene state of mind under such circumstan­ces.

At the very least, one would think that he would say something to the effect that ‘I am concerned about these prepostero­us lies being told in my regard. I am worried that the country will suffer from the state of affairs it has found itself in. I am troubled that all the hard work we have put into the economy over the last years is being placed in jeopardy.’

But at a stage in which many of the country’s institutio­ns are suffering a credibilit­y crisis – its investigat­ive authoritie­s and, not least, the police force, the Prime Minister has apparently remained serene. This simply cannot be the truth of the matter, whether the accusation­s, allegation­s and insinuatio­ns hold any water or not.

And in the face of what is beyond any questionab­le or reasonable doubt, according to the Prime Minister all is apparently serene and the government will continue to work ‘with serenity’.

This attitude simply beggars belief.

Also giving lie to the serenity the Prime Minister and the government at large appear to be enjoying is not only yesterday’s shock resignatio­n of government whip Godfrey Farrugia, nor his harsh words accompanyi­ng that resignatio­n – what shows that not all is serene are the underlying messages in Dr Farrugia’s public open letter to the Prime Minister.

As the government whip, Dr Farrugia held an extremely important position and as such he was privy to much of what has been going on behind the scenes within the Labour Party and its parliament­ary group – he has seen what has been transpirin­g from the inside and as such what can be inferred from his words, which were no doubt carefully chosen, speak volumes.

In his public resignatio­n letter, he says he “smelt a hidden agenda of people who were close to you, persons in whom you have trust”, that the political games being played behind the scenes were a “Machiavell­ian game” comprised of “post-truth politics, hypocrisy and anti-truth”. Worse still, he says, “Wrongful behaviour that was not curbed, left repercussi­ons that put us with our backs against the wall. We lost our moral fibre.”

Given all that has been going on in public view coupled with what has been going on behind the scenes, serenity, it appears, is the misnomer of the year.

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