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MALTATODAY 31 October 2021

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Saviour Balzan 5 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 31 OCTOBER 2021 OPINION The terror of Robespierre A few years back when Karl Stag- no-Navarra was a journalist with the newspaper Illum (and no- where close to being a Labourite propagandist) he wrote a report about Michael Falzon, then La- bour's deputy leader for party affairs. In one of those Sunday sermons, Falzon had reacted to a MaltaToday report by unleash- ing a torrent of libel suits. In his political speech of 6 May 2007, Falzon had said that he had then received an anony- mous email and threatening let- ter, and was very clear when he publicly said that he had "given the authority" to the Commis- sioner of Police to take action against the person suspected of having sent him the anonymous threat. Stagno Navarra had writ- ten the report. Both myself and Michael Falzon (the former PN minister, a MaltaToday columnist) then wrote about the matter itself. Falzon's column was titled "Po- licing one's enemies", prompted by his namesake's speech on the Sunday before. Falzon questioned the manner in which the two main political parties perceived the police force as a body that serves the political class and not public interest: "I say this with deep regret, but I can only be seriously perturbed by the ease with which MLP deputy leader Michael Falzon persuaded the Commissioner of Police to investigate the source of a trivial and unimportant anonymous e-mail that he had received. More so, when this e-mail could only have been mis- guidedly considered 'suspicious', and even then in an absolutely far-fetched way, in the context of the infighting and internal feuds within the MLP," Falzon wrote in his opinion piece. "So what is the government doing about this? Does the MLP Deputy Leader who happens to be my namesake, carry more weight and influence with the Commissioner of Police than the Deputy Prime Minister who is politically responsible for the Police Force?" Illum had also revealed that the Commissioner of Police John Rizzo had zealously acted on his Falzon's speech at once, and soon, the author of that email – who had actually been an admirer of Labour's Falzon – was questioned by the police and put on police bail. That man happened to be no other than well-known TV chef An- ton B. Dougall. What happened next was sur- real. Michael Falzon (PL) sued Illum, myself and his namesake Michael Falzon. He was all these cases. Illum lost the appeal, and took the case to the Constitu- tional Court. So did column- ist Michael Falzon. We all lost the case in the country's high- est court, a decision confirmed again on appeal. Now, the years post-2008 had seen us being starved of govern- ment advertising, blocked then by the staff of Lawrence Gonzi as part of a strategy to spurn all those critical of the Nationalist administration. Spending more money on legal cases was not an option. So it was left to columnist Michael Falzon to singularly pursue the matter at the Euro- pean Court of Human Rights, claiming that the courts in Malta breached his fundamental hu- man rights. Falzon won the case and was awarded damages, an event which says more about our courts than our mediocre media and political class. I write this now, for two rea- sons. The first is because most read- ers would have forgotten this story, and secondly to revisit the sensitive subject of the demands by Repubblika's action outside the police HQ earlier last week. They are calling on the Police Commissioner Angelo Gafà to nail the 'bastard' and incarcer- ate Konrad Mizzi. The Caruana Galizia family say the same. But the truth is that, no mat- ter how unpopular I may sound saying this, the demand by an- yone to call for someone to be prosecuted and jailed without respecting the course of justice or the needs of a proper inves- tigation, might come across as an over-zealous attempt to short-circuit due process, just like Robespierre's anarchism in the French revolution. Former minister Konrad Mizzi was sadly the most untrustwor- thy individual around, and his political energy is now over- shadowed by the machinations of Panamagate. But having said that, the course of justice cannot be dictated by the whims of ei- ther some kangaroo court or a group which assumes for itself that justice has to work the way they see fit. And you cannot praise Gafà for being a serious guy one day, and then choose to paste him on a poster and accuse him of being shameful and 'unwilling' to act the next. Repubblika are natu- rally quick to point their finger at Prime Minister Robert Abe- la as well; but the fact is that so far, short of resigning to hand over the keys of Castille to Ber- nard Grech, Abela did manage, against all expectations, to tick all the right boxes since he re- placed Joseph Muscat, introduce reforms and legislation and tak- ing bold steps whenever it was needed. Let's keep our feet on the ground. Nobody expects Abela to decapitate the Commissioner of Police to hand over the com- mand to Repubblika and then shoot himself in some last act of redemption. Yes: justice must be served, but not by some kan- garoo court by partisan lobbies. Everyone wants a meaningful, long-term overhaul of our po- lice, institutions and judiciary. It must be a reform that is fair for everyone. * * * Sister newspaper Illum has launched a 'Kampanja kontra l-Ħniżrijiet fil-Ħabs' to fight the defamation cases by top pris- on officials with the blessing of Home Affairs minister Byron Camilleri against this newspa- per. It is about campaigning to have human dignity at Kordin. Illum needs all the help it can get.

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