The Malta Independent on Sunday
Those who do not deserve this
The burning issue concerning the brutal murder of Daphne Caruana Galizia has, for the past two years, taken a two-headed route – one rightly and overwhelmingly pointing for justice to be made, come what may, and the other, inevitable and politically sacro
It is what genuine Labourites of all ages everywhere demand in a state of affairs that has rendered them so helpless that they feel traumatized. They have not gone through decades of toil, loyalty and perseverence for this. They certainly do not deserve to be dumped into the scum bag of history at a time when, over the past six years, they have seen their dedication and support transformed into unprecedented economic success.
The same goes for those thousands of swingers, ex-PN voters and exponents, who risked, and many of them actually experienced as a result, social isolation and bitter hatred because of their decision to help create and bolster the conquering movement that has grown around the Labour Party. That they should find themselves in this moral and political predicament is both shocking and unfair. Like traditional Labourites who warmly welcomed them and who have withstood the wear and tear of the Maltese political fabric in the name of freedom, justice and democracy, they are caught in a state where this swirling black hole keeps rushing towards them and threatening to consume them.
It has to be said that the nation is currently playing hide-and-seek with reality, the truth that one has to face, whichever way things go in the current sad situation. Delicate it may be, but bruising still whichever way you look at it.
Of course we have many with their own views as to how things should have been handled or what is to be done, many who purport to know the facts, and many still who feel free to declare things, accuse people, judge them and sentence them in one tight breath. The problem is the real institutions, made up of real professionals assisted by other real professionals from overseas, have to cope with all the political tinkering that is going on.
This is not the eternal egg-orchicken conundrum over which of them came first. There is no doubt as to whether or not one should first see that justice is done and Daphne finally left to rest in peace before seeking to evaluate what political extraction can be made, if any and if justified. Sadly, from what we have seen so far, there is this minority of people who have decided it was the chicken that came first...or was it the egg? There is no such philosophical choice. Justice is indeed the first thing that should be, as it has been, addressed and it is a credit to all those nameless professionals who have come up with access to so many legal avenues within just two years. The institutions are working because, this time, they have been wisely left free to do so.
Not so, alas, in the case of two previous horrible murders – Karen Grech and Raymond Caruana, not forefront journalists but innocent victims still – over which we are still without even a proper hint of justice. No perpetrators, no socalled middlemen, no instigators (the Italian term mandanti serves one better), just unrestrained pain for their families and unceasing suspicions for decades during which different administrations ran these islands. Not only have they been denied closure, but even deserved annual tributes to them over the many years that have passed since, have been sadly assigned to party political machines. How more unfair can we be with innocent victims of political violence? We cannot cherish today’s partial – thus far – accomplishment while overlooking yesteryear’s still pending failures.
But to go back to Daphne’s case, many also seem to be overlooking the fact that whatever the professionals dig up and present to us as a society will still need to do its long-and-winding run in Court. The tendency to let passion and bias, in whichever way one’s political pendulum sways, to bluntly and succinctly condemn those eventually facing the justice system will only lead to more division, create more unnecessary tension and serve as more of a barrier to justice than actually seeing it done.