The Malta Independent on Sunday

Truth-seekers my foot

If the delegation from the European Parliament’s Civil Liberties Committee ostensibly flew over, for the umpteenth time, “to seek the truth” of the situation in Malta, then they could hardly have been expected to find it.

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You first really need to want to. There is this vicious circle that has the timbre of a needle stuck in the groove of an old vinyl record, by way of constantly regurgitat­ing the same unfounded suspicions and hollow conclusion­s. But we’re practicall­y on the eve of a new round of Euro elections and anything is worth trying to help sow some paid lobbyist’s politicall­y prejudiced trash.

The neutral observer cannot but marvel at this obsession with the EU’s tiniest nation when two-thirds of the Union’s member states are faced with decades-old ruleof-law dilemmas, financial imbroglio and political turmoil. Take Italy, for example, home country and birthplace of the original Mafia of incumbent EP president Antonio Tajani. How many such delegation­s has it received in the past – and the present – over its incalculab­le number of cases making a parody of the rule of law? Over the years, how many Italian MEPs have been sent with fellow MEPs to investigat­e, to ask, to comment and to draw conclusion­s? None that have made a credible noise. This neurotic treatment is reserved for Malta, where Opposition MEPs, with an obvious political agenda in mind, are included – rather than asked to refrain for fairness’ sake – in delegation­s on yet another ‘mission’ to Malta.

Tajani, of course, knows this. He finds no bigotry in it, which is not surprising given his obscene comments recently on Malta and Slovakia as he shamelessl­y attempted to play down the horrors of Orban’s present-day Hungary. The man is an insult to the European Union’s highest institutio­n and he has as big a conflict of interest as St Peter’s Dome in the Vatican. Com- pared to him, Martin Schulz was a boy scout.

Tajani was Silvio Berlusconi’s right-hand man when, 15 years ago, the proven corrupt Bunga Bunga billionair­e politician caused a major political storm as Prime Minister of Italy by attacking the country’s prosecutor­s and judges as “mentally disturbed” and “anthropolo­gically different from the rest of the human race”. Did Tajani have to deal with queues of tut-tutting EP delegation­s at the time?

Now that Italy has an ultra right-wing Government, whose deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini is already in conflict with the Italian judiciary, what says the pompous Tajani, I wonder. Send in an EP delegation with one or two Italian anti-Lega MEPs in it for good measure?

Regardless of these and other complaints, rightly raised by the Labour MEPs in Brussels, the Maltese authoritie­s have always shown a courteous willingnes­s to discuss, to explain, to answer and to cooperate every time an EP delegation came to satisfy the appetite of these wolves in sheep’s clothing.

One very relevant point raised by Labour MEP Miriam Dalli, for example, was to question how – while the Working Group that came to Malta also went to Slovakia but did not include any Slovakian MEPs in the delegation – it did include a Maltese Opposition MEP. She pointedly asked: “How can a PN MEP be part of a mission sent to look impartiall­y into the rule of law of their own country, when that MEP’s thoughts are already well-known?” The same had to be said about the list of meetings that the Working Group had with so-called ‘civil society representa­tives’ composed of anti-Labour Government activists “who have a set narrative and are certainly not representa­tive of the Maltese population at large.”

Neither did Marlene Mizzi MEP beat about the bush on the issue when she tweeted her immediate reaction to Tajani’s bare-faced defence of Berlusconi’s Forza Italia support of Hungary with the absurd, sci-fi claim that “rule of law breaches worse in Malta”: “No quantum leap for European Parliament President Tajani. He just remained a Berlusconi Boy unfit for the role of President of this multipolit­ical institutio­n. He remained biased, partisan, gullible and blinkered.”

In plainer language, truthseeke­rs my foot.

History’s little ironies 1

Regular readers may remem- those “enterprisi­ng” Maltese families. In the process he also acquired the islands of Lampione and Linosa.

Today, Salvini can only blame the old king for history’s little ironies.

History’s little ironies 2

Many must still remember way back in the early Nineties the mass of Labour supporters throwing symbolic protest stones at the spot in Marsaxlokk where the gigantic chimney of the then new oilburning power-station was to be erected. It made good, naive fun at the time. I even wrote a poem on the emerging ‘smoking’ skyline of the old picturesqu­e fishing village. The tiny poem was at the time also put on ironic display (no data or intellectu­al property protection then) at a pro-chimney/pro-power-station political activity aimed at ridiculing the justified concerns of many people.

Almost three decades later, that chimney, at the time the highest structure on the Island, is happily no more. Even better – and much safer health-wise, our energy today is gas-produced. Thank the goodness of changing electoral moods, not the stones. And certainly not the poetry.

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