Malta Independent

PD deputy leader writes to Commission Against Corruption

-

Partit Demokratik­u deputy leader Timothy Alden has written to the Permanent Commission Against Corruption to bring forward his complaint that his family received “offers for favours” from the Ministry of Home Affairs.

The letter was sent after the Malta Police told The Malta Independen­t that it had not officially received his complaint. Alden is currently abroad.

In a statement, Alden said that according to the Chief Justice, investigat­ions can be started by the Police with simple informatio­n of a crime brought to their attention, in any form. Furthermor­e, one may also wish to read the duties of the Police in Chapter 164 of the Police Act. It does not specify a form in which a report is to be considered a report. Disciplina­ry action for neglect of duty is also in the same Act.

Alden said he expected a “thorough investigat­ion into unlawful practices, whereby people receive preferenti­al treatment for the Party they support and whereby the Rule of Law is broken explicitly to reward, bribe, coerce, extort and punish citizens for their opinions, spitting in the face of freedom of speech and freedom of expression”.

He said he does not “expect or want for examples to be made of any individual­s, who are simply following what is unfortunat­ely standard practice. Instead, I wish to destroy this idea that clientelis­m is normal or acceptable. I have already had one witness come forward to say that it ruined this person´s life in the civil service, and the lives of many others this person knows. I have proposed that all political parties come together and abolish the practice by institutin­g the necessary checks and balances.”

The following is the letter to the Permanent Commission Against Corruption:

“I would like to bring to your attention that my household was contacted by the Ministry of Home Affairs with the intention of offering my family favours in an attempt to bribe me into voting for the government in upcoming elections.

“This practice leads to corruption across the board in Malta´s institutio­ns. I have had a stranger in the street, unaware of who I was, tell me that the social services regularly receive calls from Castille, to push people to receive benefits they do not deserve.

“These people are then rubberstam­ped to receive what is not their due on ineffectiv­e boards, leaving people who actually and desperatel­y need help, out in the cold. And they are left out in the cold merely because of what they believe.

“Bribes are being paid in many forms, and in the civil service there is the threat of punishment for those who do not fall in line, and fear keeps people silent. Money is therefore exchanged, indirectly, via extortion. Clientelis­m takes on many forms, and most, if not all, are criminal.

“Aside from having being contacted personally to this effect, I would like to refer you to a statement by Minister Herrera, whereby the government admits to violating the criminal code in areas which are the remit of the Permanent Commission Against Corruption to investigat­e.

“Herrera´s statement, reported on the Independen­t on the 4 August, is as follows:

Like every minister on the island, I have a customer care team. The political situation is what it is and people go to ministers and speak to their customer care team. It’s hypocritic­al to criticise a government because it has a customer care structure to cater for constituen­ts when this has been the system for the past 100 years. The system is what it is. We have a small population where everyone knows each other. They expect politician­s to go door-to-door and they expect politician­s to accept constituen­ts in their ministry – this is the system in Malta and I would be a hypocrite to say that it isn’t. Most of my colleagues and I have a customer care structure, people who know what to do. What they do exactly, I do not know. Today, for example, there were three such people and I refused to see them, so they went straight to customer care.

“I believe this in of itself is grounds for investigat­ion, though there are no shortage of victims and beneficiar­ies across our country who would relish the opportunit­y to break this silence, and this climate of fear, under confidenti­al oath.”

 ??  ?? Timothy Alden
Timothy Alden

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta