MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 23 April 2023

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1497813

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 26 of 43

THE decision taken by the three Opposition MPs that are members of the Parliamentary Accounts Committee (PAC) to formally request a police per- jury investigation after Keith Schembri's PAC testimony in the last PAC meeting is a clever move. The contradictions in the sworn testimony given by Ed- ward Scicluna, Keith Schem- bri and Silvio Valletta are too blatant to be acceptable in a country that is trying to come to terms with its not-so-distant past. The Nationalist Party has asked the police to investigate a former minister, a former chief of staff and a former police as- sistant commissioner over al- leged perjury. The issue is al- leged false testimony before the PAC and the public inquiry in- to the assassination of Daphne Caruana Galizia about the con- tract awarded to Electrogas for the gas power station. Witness- es blatantly contradicting each other when giving evidence on something they were involved in cannot be acceptable in any democracy. For these witnesses to have held high influential re- ponsibilities about which some must be now lying through their teeth is even worse. The request was made follow- ing testimony before the PAC on Tuesday by Schembri, who accused Scicluna and Valletta of false testimony. The PN said that on the basis of the evidence given, somebody from among Scicluna, Valletta and Schembri had not told the truth. Schembri rubbished claims made by Scicluna before the inquiry. Scicluna had even told the inquiry that the big deci- sions by the government were taken by an inner circle that operated outside the confines of Cabinet. Schembri said that as finance minister, Scicluna would have been involved in major decisions. Schembri also denied inter- vening to stop the police ques- tioning Electrogas chief Yorgen Fenech in 2018 on the secret company 17 Black. Silvio Val- letta had told the public inquiry that Schembri had rung him up to call off the questioning, al- leging that Schembri had asked him: "Are you going to question someone on the basis of an arti- cle in The Times?" Schembri even told the PAC that lots of lies were told during the public inquiry. The need for the whole truth to be known is a must if the country is to regain some level of moral standards in the way it is governed. Unfortunately, the more time passes, the more it is becoming evident that the cur- rent administration cannot ex- pect to be considered complete- ly cut off from this dark episode of our political history. The people have a right to know the full truth and the current administration cannot shrug its shoulders and act as if it has nothing to do with what happened. The people running the government today might not be directly responsible for this dark episode in our politi- cal history but it cannot act as if it is not also not responsible for the search for the truth. Robert Abela's administration cannot have the cake and eat it. It is either in favour of un- covering the truth or in favour of hiding it. It cannot act as if the truth is irrelevant, when the country's only road back to normalcy is to acknowledge the hard facts – the truth, horrible as it might be. I have no doubt that those responsible of the obscenities that occurred under Joseph Muscat's two administrations were a small cabal of close- ly-knit 'friends'. Some others were duped into making the impossible apparently possible. Someone set up the illusion that everything was above board when it was obvious that it was not. People who are duped do not normally accept this to be a fact after the event, because that would mean they are vic- tims of deception – men who were simply the dupes of their unscrupulous leaders. They do not want to admit they were duped by their own colleagues: it is a matter of pride. But they should swallow the truth – hard as it is from a personal point of view – and admit that they were duped, rather that attempting to prove their innocence by alleging that everything was done behind their back. Before they and the current Labour leadership accept the hard truth, all that the country is going to get is contradictions with people trying to refuse facing the truth and own up to their responsibility. The healing process cannot start in these circumstances. Quenching India's thirst India has overtaken China in population terms and is now home to the biggest popula- tion in the world. Demogra- phers are divided on whether it has happened already: the birth that tips India into being the most populated country in the world. With around 70,000 babies born every day in India and 50,000 in China, the south Asian nation is set to take the lead at some point this month, becoming home to more than 1.41 billion people. All the details that make up a life get flattened out on a demographer's curve. At a na- tional level there are these hard certainties: India is bearing the brunt of a climate crisis that its population has not historically caused. Their children are en- titled to a share of the carbon budget that cannot burn with- out blowing the Earth off a safe course for all its inhabitants. In the short term, India's pop- ulation growth means more young people. A UN Popula- tion Fund survey in 2020 found that 25% of people in India are aged 14 and under, with 68% in the 15-64 bracket. That means more jobs, more development, more growth – and almost cer- tainly more consumption, fuel- ling even more emissions. More than 44 million people are still living in extreme pov- erty, and the country has a huge malnutrition problem. Devel- opment is desperately needed in parts of India but what is even more needed is that fine balance between providing enough en- ergy, enough infrastructure for people to have a decent quality of life, and checking over-con- sumption. Many Indian states face acute water shortages, as demand in- creases and rainfall becomes more erratic and rainwater har- vesting is now mandatory for new buildings in a lot of cities. Chennai, which veers between flooding and drought, ran out of water in 2019. Now it is leading on water saving practices, be- coming the first Indian city to recycle wastewater at a scale to satisfy the non-drinking needs of its industries. 7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 23 APRIL 2023 OPINION Nothing but the truth Michael Falzon micfal45@gmail.com Keith Schembri (centre), flanked by his lawyers, testifying before Parliament's Public Accounts Committee

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 23 April 2023