The Malta Independent on Sunday

Miriam Dalli slams tomorrow’s Rule of Law Monitoring Group resolution on Malta

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Some of the MEPs who form part of the Rule of Law Monitoring Group (ROLMG) “have allowed their partisan political agenda to cloud their judgement”, Labour MEP Miriam Dalli said yesterday.

Tomorrow, the European Parliament’s Civil Liberties Committee is expected to debate a draft Resolution by the ROLMG. Two votes will then take place in the weeks to come: one in committee and the other in plenary.

The Resolution follows a report compiled by the same members of ROLMG following their visits to Malta and Slovakia. The Group was establishe­d following the murders of Daphne Caruana Galizia in Malta and Ján Kuciak and Martina Kušnírová in Slovakia.

While using the recommenda­tions of the Venice Commission, the motion makes no reference to the fact that Malta’s Constituti­on was created in 1964 and that no changes have been carried out by previous administra­tions, despite having been in government for 25 years.

Worse still is the fact that the Resolution insists that the European Commission enters into dialogue with Malta in the context of the Rule of Law Framework, even though the Venice Commission never indicates a systematic breach of rule of law.

“It is unfortunat­e that there are Members who have made it amply clear what their fixed perception of Malta is, and anything that is said is used to fan that perception,” said Dalli said.

“It is unacceptab­le that there are those who want to subject Malta to rule of law talks at all costs, when it was this government that reformed laws which previous administra­tions had no interest in changing,” she said.

The MEP said that the Maltese government had always shown its openness to dialogue and had never shied away from initiating reforms in full public consultati­on. One such clear example was the media reform – a reform for which journalist­s had long been calling. Another example was the government’s invitation to the Venice Commission and the report that was presented in this regard.

“Malta now has establishe­d a Constituti­onal Reform Committee, chaired by the President of the Republic, to update the Constituti­on. But the recommenda­tions of the Venice Commission cannot be spun and used as a sort of basis for some claims that are included in a draft Resolution that is to be presented on Monday,” Dalli argued.

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