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MW 26 February 2014

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maltatoday, WEDNESDAY, 26 FEBRUARY 2014 8 News THERE is frankness in his self-por- trayal, admissions that colour in the illustration of the Eddie the public knows: the staunchness of his Ca- tholicism inherited by the "profound influence" of his Jesuit education, an achiever fit to be classroom swot ("a bit of a nerd" in his owns words), he did no sport but was an assiduous pi- anist reaching the dizzy heights of the Grade 7 examinations. Young Eddie Fenech Adami was a prime minister in the making by dint of his sedulous- ness. But like the war that marked his childhood, with its cramped com- munal underground shelters and Vic- tory Kitchen rations of goats' flesh in two inches of hair, so would Eddie be marked by a war for the state of de- mocracy later on in life. He introduces his courtship to Mary Sciberras when in his 20s, by saying that he "had long admired the way she conducted herself" – redolent of a for- gotten, antiquated manner in which one goes about the business of choos- ing a spouse. Like Fenech Adami's own personal undertaking to nurse his ail- ing grandfather back to health, Mary's own looking-after of the elderly "was a characteristic she possessed from a relatively young age". They married at the late age of 31 in 1965 after a court- ship during which the two saw each other practically only in the summers (in Bugibba where both families had summer homes there). They had five kids in the next seven years. Catholic social action played an important part in his make-up: his esteem for Enrico Mizzi is marked by describing his PN as remaining "faith- ful to its Catholic tradition". George Borg Olivier's opposition to Dom Mintoff's integration with Great Brit- ain pushed him further closer into the Nationalist Party fold. But his appre- ciation of the ill effects of Archbishop Michael Gonzi's interdiction of the Labour Party executive in 1961 lacks compassion: "Taken in its true sense, it was really no more than an instruction not to receive the sacraments, such as holy communion, if one supported certain positions taken by the party. In real- ity, no bishop can impose mortal sin on anyone… in retrospect, therefore its conduct in this regard can be justly criticised. However, I believe every event in history must be analysed in its proper, and in this case wider, con- text." There is self-praise for his political foresight, first in his imploration to Borg Olivier to reshuffle the Cabinet and then in his emphatic pleas to GBP to call elections in 1970 when the Brit- ish were mulling the renewal of the islands' defence and financial agree- ment. Unable to prick his own min- isters into action, Borg Olivier was slow in seizing the moment, and was returned to the Opposition in 1971. His political frailty reached its apex when he reached an understanding with Mintoff to make Malta a repub- lic without a referendum: Guido de Marco accused him of "an unaccept- able act of betrayal". There is no doubt that, in describing Borg Olivier as the man of the mo- ment when he clinched Independence for Malta, Fenech Adami would make sure not to overstay his welcome by stepping down months after securing EU membership and re-electing the PN to power in 2003. Borg Olivier's growing weakness, internally as well as in his inability to counter the indomitable Mintoff, led the PN to another defeat in 1976 – their worst proposal then was to abolish income tax, strongly sup- ported by Censu Tabone, resisted by Fenech Adami somewhat unsuccess- fully. "This ruined our campaign as we lost credibility with the electorate," Fenech Adami says, while denouncing corrupt practices inside the St Vincent de Paul hospital for the elderly where some 900 residents were 'encouraged' to vote Labour. Borg Olivier's hold on the PN leader- ship was tenacious in the face of the inevitable, with his successors refus- ing to draw blood until the 1977 par- liamentary group meeting in Guido de Marco's home in Hamrun to have him move out with a designate-leader in place. As leader, but even now as its politi- cal 'father', Fenech Adami embraced the 'Religio et Patria' motto with zeal. "In practical terms [it] means follow- ing a family and social policy built on religious values. For me these princi- ples were and still are the soul of the party. If there comes a day when this is no longer the case, the PN will cease to be representative of the majority of Maltese. In my view, it would then be doomed." The end of the 1970s will mark Fenech Adami's ascendance con- currently with the spiral of violence that Malta descends into, from the doctors' dispute in its opposition to a compulsory state hospital house- manship, parliamentary violence, and Black Monday: 15 October, 1979. After the Karmnu Grima incident, Labour thugs marking the 30th year of Mintoff's party leadership ran- sacked Fenech Adami's home, attack- ing his wife and family, the PN club in Valletta and Birkirkara, the Church's newspaper offices and The Times, the latter razed to the ground. "I believe Mintoff was capable of controlling them and chose not to. He did not spe- cifically provoke the incidents but my impression is he never regretted them. He certainly never apologised. On the contrary he intimated that my fierce verbal attacks on him had incited his supporters." Black Monday consolidated his power base inside the PN, but outside Fenech Adami was now 'Eddie'. His 1979 blueprint was for Malta to join the EEC, and return Malta to a social, free market without stringent govern- ment controls. In the 1981 elections, the PN polled 4,000 more votes than Labour but constitutionally lost the election with three less seats to Min- toff's 34 through "blatant gerryman- dering". The banality of Mintoffian control now assumes terrifying proportions, with the banning of 'Malta' and 'na- tion' from organisations or publica- tions (cue removal of Malta from 'The Times' and 'In-Nazzjon Taghna' becoming 'In- Taghna'), state broad- casting ruled by the government and party thuggery leading to bloodshed. So begins a downwards spiral of vio- lence and democracy teetering on the brink of collapse. He concedes that Mintoff played an important part during their secret meetings to restore a democracy in tatters. Beneath the bluster, even his deep-seated hatred of Fenech Adami, Mintoff was unhappy of his election without a majority in 1981, and was aware that he was losing control of the Labour Party. But if Fenech Adami's act of civil disobedience and passive resistance – boycotting the parliament until 1983, organising the successful boy- cott of advertisers on state television, telling the people to take a day off on the banned Imnarja feast – that forces Mintoff into negotiating the 1986 compromise to reform electoral law and guarantee Malta's 'Cold War' neutrality. In between, the violence does not subside. Tal-Barrani forges an alliance between corrupt police officers and Labour thugs inimical to democracy. Bomb attacks – which EFA refuses to consider that PN thugs may have also played a role in – provide the un- believable soundscape to these 'years of lead'. And then there's the murder of Raymond Caruana at the Gudja PN club, and a botched police inves- tigation: Fenech Adami says it as he believes it, from a gunrunner's DIY sub-machine gun traced to Nicholas Ellul ic-Caqwes, to Ganni Psaila il- Pupa, who accuses Carmelo Farrugia, a driver for Labour minister Karmenu Vella. Psaila later recanted, and fol- lowing his 'conversion' to God after an attempt on his life, still met his end in a fall from a building, as police gave chase following an alleged burglary. His famous 'budget is irrelevant' speech perhaps paints the most en- during image of Lorry Sant, the no- torious Labour minister as he strides out of the government bench to lunge at the Opposition leader. And yet Fenech Adami baffles his confidants by pardoning the cancer-ridden Sant in 1992 in an act of self-serving Chris- tian mercy and political magnani- mousness that robs the public of its deserved justice. He reserves opprobrium for Kar- menu Mifsud Bonnici, that most ef- fete of politicians, a Mintoffian zealot who married Catholic piety with so- cialist autarky. He dubs him a 'corrupt' man – politically that is, in letting the violence fester unchecked – who did his master's bidding by taking on the Church schools. There's pages dedicated to the suc- cess of his first administrations, the role of which was to restore democra- cy and a semblance of normality that cannot be given justice here. But he underestimated Sant's appeal in 1996, and outs Guido de Marco as having been hungry for the presidency even after having practically twisted Ugo Mifsud Bonnici's arm into becoming president. Chief Justice Noel Arrigo's bribery is marked as one of his regrets, and the attempt on Richard Cachia Matthew Vella Eddie, manifest destiny

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