Texarkana Gazette

Maltese citizens take up slain reporter’s message

- By Stephen Calleja

VALLETTA, Malta—Several thousand Maltese citizens rallied Sunday to honor an investigat­ive journalist killed by a car bomb, but the prime minister and opposition leader who were chief targets of Daphne Caruana Galizia’s reporting stayed away from the gathering.

Participan­ts at the rally in Malta’s capital, Valletta, placed flowers at the foot of a memorial to the 53-year-old reporter that sprang up opposite the law court building after her Oct. 16 slaying.

Some wore T-shirts or carried placards emblazoned with words from Caruana Galizia’s final blog post: “There are crooks everywhere you look now.

The situation is desperate” in the European Union nation of some 400,000 people.

Police removed a banner describing Malta as a “Mafia state.”

Hundreds of participan­ts later held a sit-in outside police headquarte­rs, demanding the resignatio­n of Malta’s police commission­er. Some hurled tomatoes, cakes and coins against an enlarged photograph of the commission­er spread out on the street.

The homicide of a journalist who devoted her career to exposing wrongdoing in Malta and raised her three sons there united many of the nation’s oft-squabbling politician­s, at least for a day.

Caruana Galizia had repeatedly criticized police and judicial officials.

Malta’s two dominant political forces, the ruling Labor and opposition Nationalis­t parties, participat­ed in the rally which was organized to press demands for justice in her slaying.

But Prime Minister Joseph Muscat told his Labor party’s radio station a few hours before the event’s start time that he wouldn’t attend because he knew the anti-corruption reporter’s family didn’t want him to be there.

“I know where I should be and where I should not be. I am not a hypocrite and I recognize the signs,” Muscat said, adding that he supported the rally’s goals of call for justice and national unity.

Nationalis­t leader Adrian Delia also skipped the rally, saying he didn’t want to “stir controvers­y.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? A banner reading “justice” opens a rally Sunday in the capital city of Malta, Valletta, to honor anti-corruption reporter Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed by a car bomb on Oct. 16.
Associated Press A banner reading “justice” opens a rally Sunday in the capital city of Malta, Valletta, to honor anti-corruption reporter Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed by a car bomb on Oct. 16.

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