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25 years of excellent reputation broken by the few for their own financial interest – Delia

Albert Galea Sunday, 11 November 2018, 13:42 Last update: about 6 years ago

25 years of Malta's excellent reputation is being broken by the few for their own financial interest, PN leader Adrian Delia said on Sunday in reaction to recent revelations relating to the Dubai-based company 17 Black.

Times of Malta and Reuters reported last Friday that an intelligence report naming Electrogas power station director and businessman Yorgen Fenech as the owner of the mystery Dubai company 17 Black, which had been named in relation to the Panama companies of Keith Schembri and Konrad Mizzi, had been handed to investigators.

Speaking at an activity at the PN's Future Leaders programme, where a number of youths posed questions on various subjects to the Opposition leader, Delia said that there was ample evidence for anyone with even the slightest amount of political responsibility to have the decency to shoulder that said responsibility. 

He said that it was time to "stand up and be counted" as the world was watching and waiting for action to be taken.  He said that every hour that passes where the Prime Minister remains silent over the new information, is an hour in which more damage is done to the country and its people as a whole. 

Delia said that for 25 years the PN had worked to build Malta's reputation in the international scene, to the point that the country's reputation preceded it and that it was always welcomed everywhere.  Now, Delia said, people were instead questioning how scandals such as these could be allowed to happen.

He noted that it is known that the owners of the Panama companies Tillgate and Hearnville were Keith Schembri and Konrad Mizzi, and questioned why Joseph Muscat, considering that he was ready to resign if he was found to own another company called Egrant, didn't force Schembri and Mizzi to resign over their proven ownership of the aforementioned companies.

Delia said that if political responsibility was not going to be taken, then the PN was ready to do all it can to defend Malta's reputation and to defend what is right.

PN will prioritise education, health, waste management and an economy driven by quality - Delia

Four separate subjects were also given due consideration during the discussion, with Delia addressing the education, health and waste management sectors along with the economy.

In terms of education, Delia said that the PN through initiatives such as the Future Leaders programme had already started working to improve the future generation, before adding said that education needs to be about improving both ourselves as people and the social environment around us.

Delia noted that they had supported the Vote 16 initiative not because it would gather political points, which was the reason that the government supported it, but because the PN truly believes in the ability of the country's youths.  He said that the PN would be doing everything, even in the opposition, to focus on education.

On waste management, Delia noted that the government had woken up after five years to notice that the mountains of waste are rising, and that they had acted only after the waste plants caught fire twice and after they noticed deadlines looming.  They had then acted in a hurried and disorganised manner by introducing a scheme that they knew would not work.

He said that for the PN, waste is a source of energy and said that the party's philosophy was to look at turning problems into opportunities.  He said that the party had voted against the legal notice related to waste management not because it was against the principle of it; but because 80% of the legal notice was ineffectively drawn up.  In fact, it was so badly written that a new legal notice had to be tabled soon after, Delia said.

Delia noted that Sunday was the commemoration of a century since the end of World War One, a conflict in which Malta was the 'Nurse of the Mediterranean', and that even 450 years ago through the Knights Malta had "five star hospitals".  He said that both in the health sector and the mental health sector, Malta has the ability and the responsibility to be at the forefront.

Finally, he reiterated his thoughts on how the government was running the economy, saying that as opposed to creating new innovative sectors which would create quality jobs, the government had opted to simply inflate the country's population - something which is not sustainable in what is by far the most densely populated country in Europe.


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