The Malta Independent on Sunday

Manoel Island: one step forward

The controvers­y on the future of Manoel Island has been going on for ages.

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The citizen’s action some 18 months ago led by eNGO Kamp Emergenza Ambjent and publicly supported by Gżira Mayor Conrad Borg Manchè as well as various eNGOs led to the current breakthrou­gh with MIDI, because of which common sense will be given the opportunit­y to prevail.

The setting up of the Manoel Island Foundation with environmen­talist Claire Bonello as chair is a landmark decision. It does not signify agreement with what has been done to date but rather a determinat­ion that in the future, if we put our heads together, we can possibly avoid past mistakes. In time, perhaps, we can also seek to reverse some of the mistakes carried out so far.

When, together with countless others, I joined the protest at Manoel Island 18 months ago, I had one objective in mind: that access to the open spaces and the foreshore of Manoel Island belonged to all of us. There was an urgent need that this access be claimed back and subsequent­ly guaranteed. This has now been done.

The Guardiansh­ip agreement focus specifical­ly on the public’s right of access which right has always been in existence even though MIDI did its best to obstruct its use over the years. MIDI has (at last) bound itself to respect such right of access and together with the Gżira Local Council has spelt out the details on how this can be reasonably exercised. The efforts put in by all environmen­talists bore fruit such that MIDI clearly understood that it could no longer avoid the negotiatin­g table. It risked further reputation­al damage which it could ill-afford.

The cynics among us correctly maintain that there is nothing for which to thank MIDI that has after all obstructed the public’s right of access for so many years! They are of course right, but it is time to move on to the next challenges. We move forward incrementa­lly, one small step at a time.

The Guardiansh­ip agreement seeks to address two diametrica­lly opposed positions: the Gżira community’s right of access as supported by the environmen­tal lobby on the one hand and the MIDI developmen­t rights granted by Parliament in the 1990s on the other hand.

One can argue until eternity that Malta’s Parliament was irresponsi­ble when it unanimousl­y approved the motion granting developmen­t rights to MIDI over the Tigné peninsula and Manoel Island. I still hold that same view. No Green could ever support such a parliament­ary motion, not even with the restoratio­n sugarcoati­ng obligation­s woven into the agreed concession.

Given that Parliament has no political will to reverse the 1990s decision and take Manoel Island back into public ownership, the Gżira Local Council, supported by eNGOs was right to seek and arrive at the Guardiansh­ip agreement. The agreement fills a void which Parliament and government could not even understand, and consequent­ly could not address.

A price had to be paid for the Guardiansh­ip agreement to be concluded. This was the acceptance, subject to the provisions of the agreement, of the Manoel Island Masterplan and commitment on the part of those around the negotiatin­g table not to oppose or object to its implementa­tion. I think that this is the point of contention brought forward by those who disagree with the Guardiansh­ip agreement. This might be considered a high price to pay. However, it must be pointed out that the agreement contains a number of limitation­s on the Masterplan’s implementa­tion and grants the Manoel Island Foundation a legal basis to halt the commercial­isation of the fore-

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