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MALTATODAY 24 September 2023

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6 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 27 MARCH 2022 OPINION 2 maltatoday EXECUTIVE EDITOR KURT SANSONE ksansone@mediatoday.com.mt Letters to the Editor, MaltaToday, Vjal ir-Rihan, San Gwann SGN 9016 E-mail: dailynews@mediatoday.com.mt Letters must be concise, no pen names accepted, include full name and address maltatoday | SUNDAY • 24 SEPTEMBER 2023 The Archbishop's provocation Editorial AT a time when it has become fashionable to blame all of Malta's ills on the foreigners who live and work here, Archbishop Charles Scicluna's homily on Independence Day was timely. It provided a refreshing moment of reflection on the current economic model that has relied on the importation of mass labour for its growth. Scicluna questioned whether we Maltese have gone from being 'the colonised to the colonisers', highlighting how foreign workers in low-income jobs are being exploited and subjected to slave-like conditions. "Yes, we are guilty of all these things. And we should feel ashamed," he said. Many commenters on social media took um- brage at Scicluna for saying the Maltese should be ashamed of themselves for treating foreigners with disdain. Many felt the Archbishop's sweeping state- ment was too much of a generalisation that ignored the difficulties on the ground. The Archbishop may have applied a very wide brush stroke to tar everyone with his hard-hitting reflection. Not everyone looks down on foreigners and seeks to exploit them but we have to admit that this country has a widespread problem with racism and xenophobia. And if it is not racism and xenophobia, then it is ignorance. Scicluna's reflection was a provocation that should have everyone stop and think about the cur- rent situation. And while the authorities have the onus to reflect on how the current economic model was built and propose how to transform it, every single individual has to reflect on personal attitudes and the words uttered in everyday life that may un- wittingly convey messages of disdain or even hate. This does not mean the country does not have its challenges brought about by a sudden influx of foreigners over such a short period of time. This influx has undoubtedly created problems as much as it generated economic activity that has benefit- ted the country. The most obvious challenge is the pressure on the country's infrastructure – roads, sewage, elec- tricity, hospitals and health centres, and schools to mention just a few. But the influx has also caused social pressure in the form of language barriers between some for- eign service providers and Maltese clients; cultural dispositions and attitudes that jar with Malta's norms and laws such as the treatment of women and queer persons; and imported regional tensions that have created a new security dimension the domestic authorities were not privy to. These challenges must be acknowledged and the concerns they stoke in various sections of the population should be addressed. Ignoring them will simply drive ordinary moderate individuals with genuine concerns and fears into the clutches of the extremists. It is within this context that Scicluna's provo- cation becomes necessary. Addressing fears and concerns should not result in a situation where foreigners are painted as the root of all evil. The Archbishop made particular emphasis on how foreigners are treated on the workplace, going as far as to call out what he described as slave-like conditions. The exploitation and discrimination must stop. Malta has employment laws that regulate worker conditions and these should be enforced to ensure employers do not abuse of their dependents, who- ever these may be. If the laws contain loopholes that allow exploitation to happen in a legal way, they should be amended. Unions must play an active part in this by widen- ing their membership base to include foreign work- ers. The unions will be able to act as watchdogs to ensure foreign workers' rights are safeguarded and their dignity respected. But Scicluna also highlighted the increased pov- erty afflicting sections of the Maltese people, who have to endure poor living conditions and subsist on wages that can "barely get some through a week, never mind a month." He also highlighted the growing dependence of hundreds on soup kitchens and homeless shelters to sustain themselves. "We cannot continue to rely on economic met- rics that fail to take into consideration the quality and dignity of life. We cannot allow a climate to persist where the poor are treated with disdain and the foreigners invited into our country to serve us, are despised and insulted under the false guise of nationalism," Scicluna said. He is right and every effort must be made to en- sure economic growth is translated into wellbeing across all sections of society. By wellbeing we mean jobs that pay adequate wages and afford dignified conditions; occupational health and safety that is made a priority; a clean environment; communities that are safe and greener; an ethic that cherishes equality and respect for the rule of law. Finding the solutions to these challenges is not easy but in Scicluna's words it certainly does not lie in ceasing to ask and seek. 23 September 2013 Mater Dei loaned medical equipment to pri- vate hospitals 'for free' MEDICAL experts concerned over 'unique' equipment sets loaned – private hospital report- ed to make more use of certain instruments than Mater Dei. Health Minister Godfrey Farrugia has put to halt a 'protocol' between Mater Dei Hospital and private hospitals which allowed the loan- ing of medical equipment from the public hos- pital to private hospitals, at no cost. The understanding, Sunday newspaper Illum reports, is that exchanges of equipment could be done between the public and private hospi- tals depending on the circumstances. So far, the two-year-old protocol had only been utilised by St James Hospital with the ratio of equipment loaned said to be at 400:1 in favour of the private hospital. Loan payments prior to these two years were minimal, with the average payment reaching €15. While the last payment was made about two and a half years ago, equipment was loaned to St James as recent as last week. According to Illum, the concern over the agreement goes beyond the fact that Mater Dei Hospital agreed to the free loan. Experts raised questions over "unique" sets, and emergency orthopaedic trauma instrumen- tation, leaving the hospital for fear they may be damaged. It transpires that loaning of certain instruments was so frequent, that it was more utilised by the private hospital. ... Quote of the Week "We cannot allow a climate to persist where the poor are treated with disdain and the foreigners invited into our country to serve us, are despised and insulted under the false guise of nationalism." Archbishop Charles Scicluna in his homily at St John's Co-Cathedral during mass to commemorate Malta's Independence Day MaltaToday 10 years ago

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