The Malta Independent on Sunday
The Best-in-Europe dream
Joseph Muscat’s ambition to make Malta the “Best in Europe” seems to have been thwarted by reality. Let us consider a few examples.
According to the most recent Worldwide Governance Indicators issued by the World Bank, Malta has experienced a veritable free fall in freedom of expression and accountability – the worst showing in 10 years. There has been a downward trend since 2014. The implications are clear.
In the meantime, air pollution in Malta is the fourth worst in the European Union. According to EU officials, pollution accounts for 80 per cent of premature deaths as it causes lung disease and cancer and possibly Alzheimer’s disease.
So not only are we not even remotely the best in Europe, but we are heading towards the opposite end of the spectrum. And we might end up kicked out of civilisation. Let me explain by giving an example that illustrates the uncivilised mentality regulating the Best Country in Europe. Enemalta announced last Thursday that it would suspend the supply in certain parts of Ħaż-Żebbuġ from 8am to 2:30pm. Seems civilised enough, except that they cut it at 7:30am... oblivious to the hassle and problems they created to unsuspecting citizens. Are the Maltese bound to live with it? No, particularly when they were promised that their country would become the Best in Europe.
The Best in Europe is turning out to mean also an influx of foreign workers who swell the demand for housing and everyday necessities while exerting inordinate pressure on the infrastructure and resources as well as the social fabric and native culture of the country.
The Best in Europe is turning out to mean a dystopian cosmopolitan city-state, saddled with the ugliness of the megalopolis – haphazard urbanisation, overdevelopment, social decline – and lacking the beauty of the European metropolis, which essentially boils down to the pleasures of the mind. Malta is not becoming another Paris, London or Rome, where you find high-level theatre, shops selling unusual but interest- ing stuff, inspired architecture and wellkept public parks, but a jaded copy of some urban agglomeration in China or South America.
The Best in Europe is not even becoming another Venice, because Venice is a place from which the inhabitants can from time to time escape to find refuge and solace in their holdings in the hinterland away from the humid and densely occupied lagoon city.
The Best in Europe is quickly degenerating into a hotchpotch of overdevelopment and shoddy urban planning and barely-integrated migrants who have no roots here and possibly do not intend to ever settle here.
Is this racist talk? No. Race has nothing to do it. This is demographics and sustainability. The physical and social environment is being threatened by a human deluge, by the wave of immigrants – irrespective of whether their skin colour is black, white, or whatever. The facts are that there simply is no space. And the country’s culture is not urban, but “semi-urban” if not even provincial. Dr Muscat thinks that a 55 per cent majority gives him the same right as an 80 per cent majority to transform the soul of the country beyond recognition. This is simply not the case. There is no physical space for his project, and there is no mental space either. He can try to change the latter, but it’s difficult to increase the former, even if he were to push forward his land reclamation agenda. He might wish to buy Pantelleria – as an intellectual recently proposed – but, like Grand Master Pinto before him (who wanted to annex Corsica), he might find this to be but a chimera.
The influx of foreigners is worrying all those who have a good head on their shoulders. Not only those who can see that the overexploitation of the environment will, sooner or later, sound the death knell of the territory. But also those who see clear threats to the culture of the people inhabiting the territory.
In his speech during the opening ceremony of the academic year, the Magnificent Rector of the University of Malta (the real one in Msida, not the fake one in Bormla) expressed the thoughts of many Maltese who have not been blinded by the gleam of the Best in Europe hype. He clearly stated that all foreigners who come to work in Malta should learn Maltese. The Professor is right. I for one am fed up of having to switch to English when I’m ordering food in a restaurant. When I’m in Malta, since I’m Maltese I want to feel at home. We all want to feel at home in Malta. Not only at restaurants – but everywhere. This is why the Magnificent Rector is right. He’s talking about a deep psychological need: to feel at home when you’re in your homeland. The foreigner has to adapt; we don’t have to adapt to foreigners.
Is this xenophobia? Of course not! Foreigners are more than welcome. But their numbers have to reflect the accommodation capacity of the territory and they have to adapt to our culture, not the other way round.
On top of that, let’s stop deluding ourselves that we are really a functioning bilingual country. We are the Best Deluded Country in Europe. Just consider that there are British universities which do not take it for granted that Maltese students have the linguistic wherewithal to study in Britain. I recently had a look at the website of a midranking English university and its English language requirements: “If you want to study for a degree from a UK university, and English is not your first language, you will need to take an English language test to prove that your English is of a sufficiently high standard.”
So far, so good. But read on: “You don’t need to prove your knowledge of English if you’re a national of, or if you have completed a qualification equivalent to a UK degree in, any of these countries: Antigua and Barbuda; Australia; the Bahamas; Bar-