Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1506448
IN a contribution to the press some 15 years ago, I criticised a Paceville nightclub owner who was quoted saying: 'If we want to compete with other clubbing destinations we cannot afford to stop at 4am.' He was speaking to a newspa- per that was covering the reac- tion of nightclub owners to a decision to impose a music cur- few at 4am. My reaction was to ask who on earth had decided that Mal- ta wants to compete with 'other clubbing destinations?' I then compared some basic statistics of two clubbing des- tinations - Ibiza and Mykonos - which some entrepreneurs wanted to emulate. I pointed out that: 'a cursory compari- son of the population density of Malta with that of Ibiza and Mykonos should reveal the folly of Malta attempting to compete with them, poining out that Ibi- za has an area of 571sq.km and a population of 114,000 while Mykonos has an area of 105sq. km and a population of 9,300'. Since then these statistics have changed considerably. Malta's population density has grown at an incredible rate and has made such basic comparisons even worse. I ended my piece in this way: 'Promoting Malta as a club- bing Mecca cannot be seriously considered. Not with our pop- ulation density – which is the most telling factor in our envi- ronmental problems and which everybody seems bent on ignor- ing consistently. Unfortunate- ly, the MTA's subsidising such events as the Isle of MTV con- cert has sent the wrong mes- sage.' Much water has passed un- der the bridge since 2008 when I wrote that piece and the comparisons made then do not make sense now. As far as Malta is concerned, the situ- ation, in fact, is much worse. The tourism authorities today do not subsidise one clubbing event but subsidize several such events and the clubbing des- tination aficionados have had their way. This is the Maltese way of do- ing things, I am afraid. Instead of finding niche mar- kets in which we can compete, we just copy what others do without comparing the local situation with that of our com- petitors - in this case in the tourism sector. Malta, Ibiza and Mykonos are Mediterra- nean islands but they are not comparable. Yet the clubbing destination aficionados ignored the basic differences between them and kept pushing for their 'dream' of making easy money from clubbing events subsidised by the tourism authorities. It comes as no surprise that The Malta Chamber of Com- merce, Enterprise and Indus- try recently issued a statement about its concern regarding the fact that international news is now describing Malta as a des- tination for tourists seeking inexpensive alcohol, legal drug consumption and uninhibited revelry. Politicians can pay lip service about aiming for high quality tourism until the cows come. What they did, and what they allowed to happen, contradicts what they say all the time. The chance to make Malta a high-quality tourism destina- tion has now been lost. It seems to me that it has been lost for ever. Frankly I cannot see it otherwise. A change in the ad- ministration cannot do the trick over the few years before Malta faces another election. The current administration will ignore all this and will soon be boasting that we have had a record breaking tourism year - as far as the number of tourists is concerned. In this boasting, the toll on the country's infra- structure will be ignored - as if the elctricity shut-downs never happened. The continuous digging of trenches to reinforce Malta's electricity, water and sewer networks will also be ignored. The interminable road works that push every car and truck driver to search for alternative routes will not be mentioned, of course: those are experiences to be suffered in silence by the population that is expected to be so proud of its government's achievements! The latest available tourism figures - for the second quarter of this year - show an increase in tourists but a decline in the length of stays with the average stay of every tourist being 4.2 nights. While the number of tourists increased by 22.4%, the number of nights spent increase by only 16.9%. This is a negative trend which overstretches low cost flights and the Sicily ferry numbers with little to show in terms of positive effects to our econo- my. Of, course the government will ignore the shortening of stays! Everything has its price but those in power just forget the price we have been paying to reach the height of the tourism 'nirvana' that the administra- tion will be boasting about - as if the tourism industry has not been evolving all these years - except for the COVID inter- lude. The current administra- tion will just pretend that this 'success' was thanks to them and them alone. Meanwhile, dreams of how tourism in Malta could and should have evolved remain just dreams. Events, my dear boy The eerie silence from the PN regarding the incident two weeks ago when the PN leader was not 'allowed' to enter the PN Hamrun club on the feast day of the locality has raised many unanswered questions. After some five days of silence, the PN officially issued a one- line statement saying that the Hamrun PN Club is going to be temporarily closed for the time being. Surely this is not enough and shows an inherent weakness in the PN communications ma- chinery. The PN rightly criticis- es the government when things are done behind the people's back. So how come it is tackling this issue behind the backs of all PN members? This assumes that the PN is doing something about it and not refraining from taking any steps at all while it just lets the issue to rankle... hoping that people will forget the incident. This is, undoubtedly the worse thing that can happen as it re- inforces the perception that Bernard Grech is weak and is hardly in control of the party - a perception that can dam- age seriously the PN's electoral chances. At the moment, Malta needs a strong Opposition to counter a situation in which the current Labour administration is being percieved as weakening every day. To let this incident fester without taking the bull by the horns - as seems to be happen- ing - is the worst decision that Bernard Grech can take. This reminds me of what Har- old Macmillan replied when he was asked what the most troubling problem of his Prime Ministership was. 'Events, my dear boy, events,' was his reply. 7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 27 AUGUST 2023 OPINION A clubbing destination! Michael Falzon micfal45@gmail.com

