The Malta Independent on Sunday

Authoritie­s well aware of our heritage obligation­s – UNESCO ambassador

Pawlu Lia’s ‘Valletta Towers’

- ■ Neil Camilleri

The authoritie­s handling a developmen­t applicatio­n by lawyer Pawlu Lia to construct what has been dubbed ‘Valletta Towers’ are well aware of Malta’s heritage obligation­s, the Malta’s UNESCO ambassador has told The Malta Independen­t on Sunday. The site in question is an 18th

century palazzo, situated at 162/163 Old Bakery Street, at the corner with Old Theatre Street.

Lia, who is the Prime Minister’s personal lawyer, already has a permit for two additional floors plus an overlying setback floor. That applicatio­n had originally been turned down but the decision was appealed and overturned last December.

Now, a fresh applicatio­n seeks to enlarge the setback floor at the sixth level.

The applicatio­n has enraged heritage NGOs, say that the project will ruin Valletta’s skyline.

The Superinten­dence for Cultural Heritage, which had opposed the original plans, is also opposing the new applicatio­n, saying that the palazzo is architectu­rally and historical­ly significan­t.

“Views and vistas within the city, and from and towards Valletta and the Harbour Fortificat­ions, are to be preserved and enhanced,” the heritage watchdog said in a letter to the Planning Authority. “The current applicatio­n now proposes a further increase in rooftop volume, with a further impact on the roofscape of Valletta. The Superinten­dence objects to this applicatio­n, which should be refused.”

When contacted, Mgr Joseph Vella Gauci, Malta’s Ambassador to UNESCO, said: “This particular project is being considered by the respective national authoritie­s who are all well-aware of Malta’s obligation­s that emanate from the World Heritage Convention.”

Malta has a series of internatio­nal obligation­s to honour, not because they are being imposed by UNESCO, but because they were agreed with UNESCO when Malta nominated Valletta – and UNESCO subsequent­ly accepted – for inclusion in the World Heritage List, he said.

“The Statement of Outstandin­g Universal Value with which Valletta was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1981 still stands and is worthy of our protection,” he added.

Mgr Vella Gauci said the Superinten­dence of Cultural Heritage regularly consults with a number of stakeholde­rs on the National World Heritage Sites Technical Committee and therefore its advice on the matter is technical, valid and reliable.

“Besides, one may wish to remember that UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre, through its advisory body ICOMOS, recommends that projects which show a significan­t chance of impact are subject to a Heritage Impact Assessment. That will help developers and authoritie­s alike to come to a fairer conclusion on the impacts of the project on the Outstandin­g Universal Values of our capital city.”

In an ironic twist, Pawlu Lia’s daughter-in-law, magistrate Nadine Lia, highlighte­d Valletta’s heritage status in a sentence she handed down to an Italian graffiti vandal.

She fined Italian Cesare Citriniti – who she found guilty of spray-painting graffiti along several walls in the capital city – €10,000 and ordered him to serve 450 hours of community service.

Sentencing Citriniti, Magistrate Lia observed that Valletta is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and “one of the most concentrat­ed historical areas in the world.” She added that thousands of people visit the city every day.

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