The Malta Independent on Sunday

‘Tardare si, scappare no’

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as the papers reveal another damning update, Muscat and his minions make some draconian move to curtail protests or intimidate the press. Before anyone has had time to recover from the last jaw-dropper, Malta’s name is whisked back into the mud.

The suffocatio­n brought about by this deluge of informatio­n is almost enough to make us forget the Police Commission­er’s derelictio­n of duty. Keith Schembri remains comfortabl­y immune from police interrogat­ion in his Mellieħa villa, happily receiving Neville Gafà, while everyone is left baffled as to why Keith Schembri is not in custody.

It really makes you wonder who is still pulling the strings when the police remain inactive while incriminat­ing testimony pours of court, especially when the Labour establishm­ent has claimed that they felt betrayed by Schembri.

This only confirms what everyone, from the protestor at the ironic Freedom Square to the European Parliament delegation, has been saying: Muscat should have resigned long ago. While he continues to occupy Castille, it is impossible to ascertain the rule of law in Malta. He knows this, and Owen Bonnici knows this, despite their self-serving panegyrics claiming the contrary.

It is not enough to claim betrayal to sympathise with the Maltese public’s sentiment. The Maltese do not want sympathy, they want action, starting with Joseph Muscat’s immediate resignatio­n and continuing with a full, public and independen­t investigat­ion into his behaviour. Because it is more than obvious that he is far from having nothing to hide.

The ‘honourable exit’ ship has sailed for Joseph Muscat. It sailed back in 2016, when the Panama Papers story broke. That he is trying to mitigate the damage to his legacy now is only signs of serious delusion or, much worse, that he is doing so deliberate­ly. If so, he has to have a fairly persuasive reason for jeopardisi­ng the country’s sanity and democratic credential­s: self-preservati­on.

Like any good dictator, he has sunk to new depths to save his own neck, all whilst flailing about trying to keep a straight face. He had already made a habit of dodging the press, but now, aside from dodging soaring eggs, he has become increasing­ly inventive in his approach. You do not have to run away from journalist­s if you lock them in a room in the OPM guarded by unauthoris­ed thugs.

Each day he remains in office, the country’s agitation increases exponentia­lly. Dictatoria­l tactics have no place in a modern, European state. While his colleagues criticise protestors, Muscat’s own supporters are assaulting and intimidati­ng journalist­s and activists in an incredibly tone-deaf move while Malta struggles to cope in the shadow Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder.

It is clear that Muscat is not seeking to repair his reputation or to mitigate any damage being caused. He is using his power for nothing more noble than to defend the indefensib­le, to undermine investigat­ions and to aggravate the cleavage he has carved into Maltese society. Each hour he remains in office is exponentia­lly damaging an already desperate society.

Barricadin­g Freedom Square will not solve anything. Smiling for selfies while protestors fight for the good of their country does nothing to improve tensions, nor does it send the message that the people’s representa­tives are taking this crisis seriously. If it is storms that show the seaworthin­ess of the sailor, these people are proving only their invertebra­cy in compliance with the will of their despicable leader.

With a personal reputation in tatters, independen­t institutio­ns emasculate­d, a criminal investigat­ion compromise­d, the rule of law dead in a ditch and a society heartbroke­n and betrayed, it is bewilderin­g and outrageous that Joseph Muscat should remain Malta’s Prime Minister for another minute. He is the last person who should be wielding those powers, more so when he has not even committed to saying whether or not he is still in touch with Keith Schembri.

Trust in Muscat has been fragmented and, while he remains in office, so has the Maltese people’s trust in our country’s institutio­ns and leaders. It is shameful that the hard work of so many honourable people in the course of Maltese political history is rapidly being voided, while hard-working Maltese are forced to take up the fight for truth, justice and democracy.

In his own words, the same people who caused our nation’s problems cannot be the ones to resolve them. Muscat has been – and will continue – trying to prolong the inevitable. He should know that his efforts to delay judgment day are futile and will only cause more hardship on people of goodwill. To Muscat, I say, “tardare si, scappere no”. Do Malta and the rest of Europe a favour and leave now.

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