Corporate DispatchPro

Malta News ROUNDUP

- DENISE GRECH

The EU Commission’s winter forecast expects Malta’s economy to grow by 4.5 percent this year after a biting contractio­n in 2019. The report anticipate­s a modest recovery in 2022 as net exports return to normal levels.

The Auditor General told a parliament­ary committee that the Electrogas power station agreement includes four liability clauses that would force the government to pay investors €417 million if the deal were terminated.

Media house Lovinmalta filed a constituti­onal action seeking to annul a provision in the Broadcasti­ng Act that allows political party stations to circumvent the impartiali­ty principle by cancelling each other out. One and Net, the media arms of the two political parties, said they will challenge the case.

The Nationalis­t Party criticised the appointmen­t of former Finance Minister Edward Scicluna as governor of the Central Bank, which gives him an automatic seat on the Financial Services Authority board. The PN said the move is a blow to the country’s credibilit­y.

Finance Minister Clyde Caruana said that Air Malta is losing €170,000 every day in operationa­l losses. The minister said the government will seek permission from Brussels to inject state support into the ailing national airline.

The Union of Midwives and Nurses said that initial talks with the authoritie­s over an exodus of nurses leaving for the UK were encouragin­g. Reports revealed that British recruiters were targeting healthcare workers in Malta to keep up with the demand in the sector.

The Abortion Support Network announced that more than 200 people sought its services since it was establishe­d in Malta in 2019. The NGO said request for help ranged from advice on abortion clinics to funding for trips abroad.

The state broadcaste­r, PBS, was ordered by the Industrial Tribunal to pay former CEO John Bundy €230,000 for unfair dismissal. The PBS board, which had fired Bundy over allegation­s of breaching procuremen­t rules, vowed to appeal the ruling.

A contractor and a constructi­on worker charged with the involuntar­y homicide of a woman who died in a house collapse last year, chose to stand trial. Another two men facing the same charges will be judged by a Court of Magistrate­s.

A country lane in Dwejra was paved over with cement by Infrastruc­ture Malta, the agency responsibl­e for roadbuildi­ng. Members of a conservati­on NGO deplored the decision, pointing out that the path had historical value.

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