Malta Independent

The month when Sai Mizzi was finally found

● Black Hungarian student wrongfully manhandled and cuffed at Valletta bus terminus ● Prime Minister proposes splitting AUM campus

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This month was dominated by a number of major news stories including one involving a parliament­ary secretary, the ‘discovery’ of Sai Mizzi (the energy minister’s wife), another involving a black student who was manhandled by police officers after he was racially abused and the case of a Gozitan boy who saved an infant from drowning in Gozo.

On 1 July, The Malta Independen­t revealed that a man wrote to the Permanent Commission Against Corruption and other national institutio­ns asking them to investigat­e the redevelopm­ent of rural property by Parliament­ary Secretary Ian Borg, claiming that abuse of power led to the issuing of a developmen­t permit which should never have been issued. Noel Ciantar, a Rabat farmer who is also qualified as an accountant, carried out his own journalist­ic investigat­ion into the case after reports on the proposed developmen­t in a picturesqu­e area in the limits of Rabat surfaced on the media, alleging that planning policies were breached to allow the redevelopm­ent of the site. In December, we revealed the findings of the Ombudsman’s environmen­tal commission investigat­ion which delved into the process used by Mepa in this case. It found that the Developmen­t Permit Applicatio­n Report (DPAR) drawn up by Mepa’s case officer contained a “series of omissions and variation in the text” that “cannot be put down to human error but point to a deliberate attempt to remove the one remaining obstacle potentiall­y blocking approval of the applicatio­n”. As for the investigat­ion by the Commission against corruption, it is still under way. Mepa released a right of reply which read that it acted “correctly”.

That same day, we reported that former minister Austin Gatt said he never interfered in the oil procuremen­t procedure, and that he never spoke to anyone on the tendering committee. Dr Gatt was testifying before the Public Accounts Committee over oil procuremen­t procedures between 2003 and 2010.

But the case which hit the headlines in July was an incident which took place at the Valletta bus terminus on 2 July – the day of the launch of the new bus card system – which culminated in the wrongful and overly forceful arrest of a black Hungarian university student who was trying to make people form an orderly line when the tallinja card system failed. As chaos erupted, Daboma Jack, who is in Malta reading for a Masters Degree in Engineerin­g, tried to get people to form an orderly line but he was confronted by a woman who hurled racist comments at him. Eventually, RIU police officers who arrived at the scene were captured on camera manhandlin­g Mr Jack. The Police had claimed that they were led into thinking that Mr Jack was the perpetrato­r in this whole saga. In an exclusive interview with The Malta Independen­t the day after, Mr Jack said that what made him cry was the clapping when the police pinned him to the ground.

On the same day, Libyan Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni was in Malta for talks with Prime Minister Joseph Muscat. He said that once Libya unites it will continue to fight IS.

On 3 July, Dr Muscat said that his government was proposing that the American University of Malta campus would be split. It later transpired that a campus would be set up at Marsascala’s Żonqor Point and another in Cospicua. A massive controvers­y ensued due to the fact that it was proposed the campus be built on a massive portion of ODZ land in Marsascala. This issue sparked the biggest environmen­t-related protest Malta ever witnessed.

We also reported that a court turned down a request by businessma­n Mark Gaffarena for a warrant of prohibitor­y injunction against the owners of part of a building in Old Mint Street, Valletta, on which he made a hefty profit through a fast expropriat­ion initiated by the government. The parallel investigat­ions which looked into the case of the Old Mint Street property have not yet been published.

On 5 July, the European Central Bank (ECB) asked Bank of Valletta’s top officials to explain how millions of euros in unsecured loans were issued to Air Malta to make up for the airline’s discrepanc­y in its fuel-hedging agreements over the past year.

On 6 July, we reported that Libyan Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni had a few ‘teething’ problems while on his visit to Malta after his security detail which was armed to the teeth was spotted by this newsroom outside a private dental practice in the centre of the island.

When this newsroom investigat­ed further, sources said “a high-profile government guest” was visiting a dentist in Naxxar at the time.

On the same day, we reported comments made by Sai Mizzi – the wife of Energy Minister Konrad Mizzi – who said “you finally found me” after the Opposition cried foul over the fact that she had been appointed special envoy to China but attempts made by the media to locate her in China proved futile.

On 19 July, veteran actor John Suda was charged with the violent indecent assault of a 22-yearold woman. We revealed that a Dingli family was considerin­g taking legal action in a bid to reverse the sale of a property to Parliament­ary Secretary Ian Borg after they learned that their mentally-ill and vulnerable father had been duped into selling a piece of land for a suspicious­ly low price and under dubious circumstan­ces to the Cabinet member .

On 22 July, Italian President Sergio Mattarella made a short official visit to Malta where he met with Prime Minister Joseph Muscat and President Marie-Louise Coleiro Preca. Immigratio­n topped the agenda.

On 25 July, Gasol, which has been reported to have been ailing financiall­y, was removed from a new and improved company structure announced by Electro-Gas Malta, which is building the new Delimara power station.

On 30 July, this newsroom exclusivel­y reported that a 13year-old Gozitan boy saved an infant from drowning at Marsalforn Bay. In December, Karl Curmi was awarded a Midalja għall-Qlubija.

On 30 July, this newsroom exclusivel­y reported that a 13-year-old Gozitan boy saved an infant from drowning at Marsalforn Bay

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