The Guardian (USA)

Malta government bears responsibi­lity for journalist’s murder, inquiry finds

- Lorenzo Tondo and Reuters

An independen­t inquiry in Malta into the murder of the anti-corruption journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia has found that the state had to bear responsibi­lity after creating a “culture of impunity”.

The 437-page report, conducted by a team of judges and released on Thursday, said the state “failed to recognise the real and immediate risks” to the investigat­ive journalist’s life and “failed to take reasonable steps to avoid them”.

Caruana Galizia was killed by a car bomb as she drove away from her home on 16 October 2017. Her death was met with outrage across Europe, and embroiled Malta’s ruling Labour party in a political scandal.

Prosecutor­s believe the businessma­n Yorgen Fenech, who had close ties with senior government officials, mastermind­ed the murder. Fenech, who is awaiting trial for associatio­n to murder, denies responsibi­lity.

Three men suspected of setting off the bomb were arrested in December 2017. One has since pleaded guilty as part of a plea bargain and is serving a 15-year jail term. The other two are awaiting trial. The self-confessed middle man turned state witness and was granted a pardon.

The inquiry, conducted by one serving judge and two retired judges, found that a culture of impunity was created by the highest echelons of power within the government of the time.

“The tentacles of impunity then spread to other regulatory bodies and the police, leading to a collapse in the rule of law,” said the panel’s report, which was published by the prime minister, Robert Abela.

It was clear, the inquiry board said, that the assassinat­ion was either intrinsica­lly or directly linked to Caruana Galizia’s investigat­ive work.

The former prime minister Joseph Muscat resigned in December 2019 after Fenech’s arrest. He has never been accused of any wrongdoing. Media later also revealed close links between Fenech, ministers and senior police officers.

Muscat wrote on Facebook on Thursday that the report “unequivoca­lly states that I was in no way implicated in the murder … It is to be noted that the inquiry found that the state had no prior knowledge of, or was involved in the assassinat­ion.”

The report’s conclusion­s do not oblige the government to take any action, but the opposition Nationalis­t party called on Muscat and Abela to shoulder their responsibi­lities.

“The state inquiry is clear: Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder was enabled by the collective inaction of Joseph Muscat’s cabinet, many of whom still hold public office. Robert Abela must ensure that responsibi­lity for this culture of impunity is shouldered,” the opposition leader, Bernard Grech, said in a statement.

Abela tweeted that the report “merits mature analysis beyond partisan arguments. Lessons must be drawn and the reforms must continue with greater resolve.”

In their report, the judges attributed indirect responsibi­lity to Muscat for the circumstan­ces leading to the murder, citing his failure to act against his chief of staff, Keith Schembri, and the former energy minister Konrad Mizzi over their secret companies, revealed in the Panama Papers, and their alleged links to 17 Black, a secret company owned by Fenech.

Muscat, Schembri and Mizzi have not faced any charges linked to Caruana Galizia and have publicly denied involvemen­t. Schembri and Mizzi did not comment on Thursday’s report.

The report said decisions by Muscat had strengthen­ed the culture of impunity in which people the assassinat­ed journalist wrote about operated.

Repubblika, a rule-of-law group that held daily public protests in the runup to Muscat’s resignatio­n, announced another protest outside the prime minister’s office for Friday evening.

The judges called for immediate action to rein in and regulate the links between politician­s and big business. Their inquiry heard evidence from the police, government officials, the Caruana Galizia family and journalist­s, among others.

Caruana Galizia had led the Panama Papers investigat­ion into corruption in Malta. A blogger whose posts often attracted more readers than the combined circulatio­n of the country’s newspapers, she had been described before her death by the Politico website as a “one-woman WikiLeaks”.

In a statement, the Caruana Galizia family said: “The inquiry’s findings confirm the conviction our family held from the moment Daphne was assassinat­ed: that her assassinat­ion was a direct result of the collapse of the rule of law and the impunity that the state provided to the corrupt network she was reporting on.

“We hope that its findings will lead to the restoratio­n of the rule of law in Malta, effective protection for journalist­s, and an end to the impunity that the corrupt officials Daphne investigat­ed continue to enjoy. Daphne and her work will live on in ensuring that the recommenda­tions of this inquiry effect lasting change.”

The Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation said the report was a landmark moment in the campaign to hold the state accountabl­e for its obligation to protect journalist­s. “This is a historic opportunit­y to ensure real change for the safety of journalist­s and to a process of national healing following the traumatic assassinat­ion of Daphne Caruana Galizia,” it said.

 ?? Photograph: Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters ?? A picture of Daphne Caruana Galizia is held aloft as people gather in Valletta, Malta, calling for the resignatio­n of the then prime minister, Joseph Muscat, in 2019.
Photograph: Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters A picture of Daphne Caruana Galizia is held aloft as people gather in Valletta, Malta, calling for the resignatio­n of the then prime minister, Joseph Muscat, in 2019.

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