BFF-62 Activists demand independent probe into Maltese reporter’s murder

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Activists demand independent probe into Maltese reporter’s murder

BRUSSELS, Oct 16, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – International media freedom groups
urged the Maltese government to open a public and independent investigation
into anti-corruption journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder a year ago on
Tuesday.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) executive Julie Majerczak said her group
and four others delivered the message on Monday to Prime Minister Joseph
Muscat of Malta, a European Union member country.

“We are asking the Maltese prime minister to immediately open a public
and independent inquiry to establish whether or not the murder of Daphne
Caruana Galizia could have been avoided,” Majerczak said at a press
conference in Brussels, flanked by EU officials.

A year after Caruana Galizia was killed in a car bombing on October 16,
2017, RSF and the other groups told Muscat that there has been “no meaningful
result in the investigation beyond identifying three suspected hitmen.”

The statement they gave him said those who ordered her murder have still
not been identified or brought to justice, questioning “the independence and
limited scope of the investigation”.

RSF suggested the use of retired judges who have no links to the
government.

The statement asked whether investigators had explored all possible
avenues, including whether her “assassination was related to her reporting on
corruption at the highest levels in Malta”.

Caruana Galizia’s blog sought to expose scandals on the island state from
petrol smuggling to money laundering, offshore bank accounts to nepotism,
implicating members of the government and organised crime.

The statement said Caruana Galizia had endured countless threats that had
been tolerated during her 30-year journalistic career — including having her
home burned and dogs killed.

The threats “helped create an environment in which she could be murdered
with impunity,” the statement charged.

It said a campaign against the investigative journalist and her family
continues after her death, with 30 active libel cases against her, “including
lawsuits filed by you, Prime Minister, against her and her son.”

Senior European Commission officials including Vice President Frans
Timmermans also demanded justice for Caruana Galizia.

“We need to send a clear signal to all journalists: it is safe to work in
Europe,” they said in the statement from Brussels.

“If journalists are silenced, so is democracy. This will not happen in
Europe. Not on our watch.”

Those calling on Muscat to open an independent investigation also
included the International Press Institute, PEN International, the Committee
to Protect Journalists and the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom.

BSS/AFP/RY/1918 hrs