Malta Independent

Silvio Zammit, former aide to John Dalli, dies at 57

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Silvio Zammit, accused of soliciting a €60 million bribe in return for influencin­g then-European Commission­er John Dalli to lift a retail ban on smokeless tobacco, has died, the Sliema local council said. He was 57.

Zammit, a restaurate­ur, was wellknown in his hometown of Sliema, running the restaurant named after his father, Peppi ‘tal-Imqaret’, a seller of datecakes. He was also an honorary president of the St Gregory’s band club in Sliema, a deputy mayor, as well as a circus and fairground­s impresario.

In his ‘political’ role, the Nationalis­t activist was a canvasser for Nationalis­t ministers like Michael Refalo and Michael Frendo, before he was asked by the PN to canvass for John Dalli in 2008. In time, he became the short-lived deputy mayor of his hometown.

Between 2011 and 2012, Dalli, as European Commission­er, was spearheadi­ng a review of the Tobacco Products Directive, where he intended to keep up a ban on the sale of snus outside Sweden, the only EU Member State to have a derogation from the ban.

Zammit was suspected of complicity in the attempted bribe to help lift a ban on the chewable tobacco.

A four-month investigat­ion by the EU’s anti-fraud unit led to Dalli’s resignatio­n on the grounds that there was enough circumstan­tial evidence that the Maltese commission­er was aware of the attempted bribe.

Dalli resigned on 16 October 2012 after a four-month investigat­ion by the EU’s anti-fraud unit, led by its chief Giovanni Kessler. Zammit was later charged in December 2012.

Dalli was however only charged with the offence in 2022 – 10 years later. His case started to be heard earlier this week.

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