The Malta Independent on Sunday

Grey listing: after years of zero enforcemen­t on money laundering

The grey listing announced earlier during the week as a result of a decision by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is definitely not fair on the Maltese people

- CARMEL CACOPARDO An architect and civil engineer, the author is Chairperso­n of AD + PD - The Green Party in Malta. carmel.cacopardo@adpd.mt, http://carmelcaco­pardo.wordpress.com

The grey list is government’s making. However, the opposition certainly has a finger in the pie too as it is ultimately responsibl­e for the weak institutio­ns which it left in place in 2013. These weak institutio­ns facilitate­d the current mess.

We should all be saddened by the decision of the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) to have Malta on its grey list, even though this course of action was expected.

Government spokespers­ons have been emphasisin­g that a lot of regulatory sprucing and reinforcem­ent has been taken in hand. However, they did not tell us that this has been done after several years of zero enforcemen­t.

We have had all Labour MPs in Parliament refusing to condemn Konrad Mizzi and Keith Schembri when their Panama Papers involvemen­t was made public. All of them have contribute­d to this grey listing.

Do you remember Evarist Bartolo explaining on Hard Talk why he voted in favour of Mizzi and Schembri? He had a strategy for survival, hoping “to live and fight another day”. Or Leo Brincat’s explanatio­n when being scrutinise­d by the EU Parliament Budgetary Control Committee prior to his appointmen­t at the European Court of Auditors? Leo Brincat had then stated that he did not want to live as a hero for one day, to be subsequent­ly condemned to the wilderness for the rest of his life!

We have had the Commission­er of Police not investigat­ing money laundering cases for years on end. It is only recently that a new Police

Commission­er has made investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns possible.

Unfortunat­ely, the action against money laundering has been late in coming. Considerab­le damage has resulted in the meantime. Government criminal complicity in all this has seriously damaged the economy and society. It is those in the lower income levels who will feel most of the impacts of all this. They need our empathy. It is they who need most protection at this point in time.

Government with the support of the opposition has over the years developed a “national consensus” on the financial sector including the setup which makes it possible for internatio­nal tax evasion to make use of Malta as a base. Together with the sale of citizenshi­p scheme this has further contribute­d to the erosion of Malta’s reputation as a trustworth­y jurisdicti­on.

Anybody remembers the circumstan­ces which led to the 2018 resignatio­n of the MFSA (Malta Financial Services Authority) CEO Joseph Cuschieri following his Las Vegas trip with Yorgen Fenech becoming public knowledge? The trip had been financed by Fenech when Cuschieri was still the Gaming Authority Chief, supposedly regulating Yorgen Fenech’s casino!

All this mess was directed by Joseph Muscat and Edward Scicluna, former Finance Minister who has been rewarded for his endeavours by his appointmen­t as Governor of the Central Bank. Muscat is gone. Scicluna, politicall­y responsibl­e for ensuring that money-laundering structures were functionin­g, needs to follow him at the earliest. He should either resign or be dismissed forthwith.

It is also pertinent to point out that all this was the subject of the investigat­ive journalism of Daphne Caruana Galizia who was blown up for her efforts to inform us and expose the criminal elite. We have lost a life: a mother, a wife, a journalist.

Immediate action is essential to start rebuilding Malta’s reputation. This should include the immediate repeal of the sale of citizenshi­p scheme and closing the legal loopholes which have transforme­d Malta into a tax haven.

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