MediaToday Newspapers Latest Editions

MALTATODAY 22 FEBRUARY 2026

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1543384

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 24 of 35

The following are excerpts from the interview. The full interview can be found on maltatoday. com.mt as well as our Facebook and Spotify pages. PHOTOS: JAMES BIANCHI / MALTA TODAY A few days ago, Il-Kollet- tiv essentially condemned government's pace when it comes to the planning reform consultation. Where did this come from? We criticised the fact that the process has completely stalled. There has been no meeting since November. They told us that the amendments are coming but nothing has happened. Last January, the prime minister said that these [amendments] will be sent to us but there's nothing so far. We have the impression that they're waiting for the election to come and go so they can pass these laws the way they tried to do last August… How was the mood in the meetings you had with government? How did gov- ernment's representatives behave in the meetings? When there are meetings behind closed doors I don't like to share details. But I can tell you that what we have been talking about was understood clearly, and I think there were people who agreed with us because they had a chance to study how these bills will impact their work, their districts, and the way laws work in Malta… The person who wrote these bills— architect and lawyer Robert Musumeci— didn't stay within the remit of planning and tried to affect laws that have nothing to do with planning... There were a number of proposals centred around the needs of Robert Musumeci and his clients… Musumeci as a lawyer? Yes. He is an architect and a lawyer. By day he is government's lawyer who writes planning laws, and by night he is the developers' architect who tries to bypass these laws. He failed to win many cases so he is trying to shift the goalposts and change the rules in a way that benefits him… If an election is held before these bills move forward, these bills are no longer on parliament's agenda. Isn't that a chance to go back to the drawing board? There's a chance to go back to the drawing board right now and present a proper reform before the election. Everyone knows that election season is a time when lobbies, including the developers' lobby, chase political parties to see what they can gain out of them… The planning bills are a bargaining chip used by developers to see what they can squeeze out of the parties. When the election is over, government has a mandate to basically do what it wants and it would be much more difficult to mobilise people on this issue after the election. Why doesn't the Prime Minister do what's just and keep a number of promises he made, and give us a proper reform? What are the issues that you and your colleagues on the board aren't ready to compro- mise on? We are not negotiating. This isn't a case where a bill has 20 wrong points and we're willing to let 10 of them go. The entire planning bills are rotten. The only thing that should be saved is the suspension of works [until the appeals process is exhausted]. Everything else is frivolous. When you and your colleagues on the board (Claire Bonello and Ingram Bondin) speak, do you speak with one voice? Are you united? Yes, definitely. We want the same things. If you look at the four points made by the Gustizzja ghal Artna campaign, the second point concerns the suspension of works which should be equal for all residents. Fundamentally, we are saying the same things. The only difference is that the NGOs have been participating in this discussion for years. We [Il-Kollettiv] are the voice of a number of resident groups that will be impacted by these bills. I should say, apart from Claire Bonello, I've spoken to a number of lawyers and they all agree that the bills are a disaster from the way they were written to what they will bring about… Let's talk about Il-Kollettiv. When this was set up you left the door open for the group to become a political party. Do you have any updates on this? We've always said that if the conditions to do so are right, we could consider it, but right now, the conditions to launch a political party are simply not there. We're still focused on what we were doing even before we launched Il-Kollettiv. We're organising resident groups so that they can be autonomous and have a say on what's happening outside their front door. Opening a party is not a priority and I believe that participation in a democracy doesn't necessarily require a political party. Our activism, where we discuss policies such as the planning bills, is part of a wider discussion on what country we want to live in and what direction our economy should have. We are doing politics with a small 'p'. But I think it's crucial to focus on what's essential right now. We've seen different negative situations in different places with the silver lining being that they've brought different people together to work for their localities and propose solutions. Each locality has its own story and reality. We love learning about what's happening on the ground from these people but there's also a sense of community that is slowly starting to grow. 5 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 22 FEBRUARY 2026 INTERVIEW

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of MediaToday Newspapers Latest Editions - MALTATODAY 22 FEBRUARY 2026