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Caruana Galizia was Malta’s most prolific investigative journalist, uncovering corruption and criminality at the highest levels in the country. But on 16 October 2017, she was murdered when 400g of TNT detonated under the seat of her car barely a few hundred metres from her rural family home.
“There was a moment where I walked in and I expected to hear my mother typing because she would work at the table upstairs.”
Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia with her two sons, Paul (right) and Andrew. Source: Supplied
He says he still recalls those moments with “a kind of complete clarity” and with the passing of time, they haven’t faded.
“This isn’t only about me and my brothers and my aunts and my father. This is about Malta. This is Malta against corruption.”
Daphne Caruana Galizia with sons in Malta. Source: Supplied
The trials
A series of high-profile trials garnered global media attention as three men accused of carrying out the execution faced court. One of them was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2021, while last year two brothers were sentenced to 40 years each.
One of Malta’s richest men, Yorgen Fenech, was then arrested trying to flee the country on his private yacht. He had been implicated in Daphne’s earlier investigations into shady offshore companies with ties back to Schembri and former economy minister Christian Cardona. Fenech is now awaiting trial, accused of masterminding the killing. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges against him.
Maltese tycoon Yorgen Fenech (centre), whose business interests span the energy and tourism sectors, walks into court escorted by his lawyer Gianluca Caruana Curran (right) in November 2019 in Valletta, Malta. Source: AFP / via Getty Images
When a public inquiry into Daphne’s murder was finally held, a panel of judges concluded in their 2021 report that Malta had been “moving towards a situation which could be qualified as a mafia state. It was the journalist’s assassination that put a brake on this predicted disaster”.
But the family says it won’t stop campaigning until attention turns back to the corruption stories Daphne risked her life to report.
Protesters hold up placards and pictures of the late journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia as they gather outside the prime minister’s office to call for his resignation, in Valletta, Malta on 20 November 2019, the day Maltese businessman Yorgen Fenech, who is believed to be the mastermind behind her assassination, was detained on his yacht after he tried to leave Malta. Source: AFP / Matthew Mirabelli/AFP via Getty Images
“So there hasn’t been a single prosecution over any one of her major corruption stories,” Paul says. “And our view in the campaign has always been that the rule of law crisis in Malta is what enabled the murder to happen.
“Is the state of Malta really working as it should be? The answer is no. And what do we need to get it to work as it should? And really that’s a kind of life’s mission, proper constitutional reform, achieving it and then ensuring it remains in place.”
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