Main content

Son of murdered Maltese journalist on justice

Paul Caruana Galizia: “I think we’ll be in the courts for the rest of our lives”

Progress on tackling corruption in Malta hasn’t been ‘fast’ or ‘deep enough’ the son of journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia has told the 鶹Լ six years on from her assassination.

In a new book, Paul Caruana Galizia writes about his mother’s life and the ongoing campaign for justice since she was killed by a car bomb in 2017.

Daphne was Malta’s most well-known newspaper columnist and blogger. Her work focused on exposing systematic corruption and abuse of power in the small island nation.

So far, three people have been convicted of her murder. Other cases are ongoing.

One of Malta’s richest businessmen, Yorgen Fenech, has been charged with conspiracy to murder and is expected to stand trial next year. Prosecutors allege he was the mastermind behind the assassination. He denies the charges.

Caruana Galizia said, “I thought writing about her murder would be the difficult thing for all the obvious and gruesome reasons but in the end what proved the hardest was learning about her life…what made her a journalist, the kind of country she grew up in.”

A pioneer in her field, Daphne was the first female columnist in the country and the first journalist to publish articles under her down name.

“Her editor would get comments like who is this person, is her father writing her columns for her, is her husband writing her columns for her?”, he said.

A public inquiry into her death concluded in 2021 finding that the state had to “shoulder responsibility” because it had created an “atmosphere of impunity” and had failed to take reasonable steps to protect her.

“There are these moments where you get small measures of justice, prosecutions, hopefully convictions”, Caruana Galizia said, “but at the end of the day nothing will return her to us."

Release date:

Duration:

3 minutes