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From Our Own Correspondent

Malta and the Mafia

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 15 February 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

French prosecutors announced this week that say they have started an investigation into the business activities of the Maltese magnate charged with complicity to murder the journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia. It’s just the latest development in a scandal that shocked Europe and led to the resignation of Malta’s prime minister last month. The inquiry in Paris is a response to allegations by the reporter’s family that, Jorgen Fenech, one of the island richest businessmen, used cash from property deals and racehorses in France to bribe Maltese officials. Juliet Rix is a frequent visitor to Malta. She reflects on how the European Union’s smallest country has changed …and not for the better.

The coronavirus epidemic is adding to tensions in Hong Kong, a city already riven by seven months of anti government protests. As the number of infections rise, many are clamouring for the territory to seal itself off from the Chinese mainland. Last week, public hospital employees went on strike to try and force the authorities to close all border crossings. Some Mandarin speaking mainlanders feel unwelcome and relations with Hong Kongers are increasingly strained as Vincent Ni discovered at a delicious but difficult dinner party.

India’s once tigerish economy is flagging. And there’ve been suggestions that growth figures were over-estimated for years, hiding what’s been called by one leading economist ‘the great slowdown.’ But the government of Narendra Modi’s BJP party remains relentlessly optimistic. Lesley Curwen who’s just back from Delhi and Hyderabad has been testing the water.

Pope Francis dampened hopes among reformist Catholics that he was on the point of relaxing the centuries-old celibacy rule for the clergy – despite a shortage of priests in many parts of the world including the Amazon. There was even speculation that he might allow women to celebrate Mass. But there was no mention of such changes in the papal document. It seems, says David Willey, that Pope Francis has opted to focus not on the internal issue of celibacy but the external challenge of climate change.

There has been much soul searching about how smartphones have killed the art of conversation. The texting culture, the argument goes, is making us lazier, shallower and less literate. But sooner or later slang ends up in the Oxford English Dictionary. Andrew Harding grudgingly admits that language evolves and that common usage eventually becomes correct usage unless you’re a dyed-in-the-wool pedant.

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music, radio podcasts.

0:05.0

Good morning.

0:06.2

Today, how to measure the economy.

0:08.8

India's seems to be flagging and the answer might be watery. How to gauge the atmosphere in Hong Kong

0:15.8

our correspondent attends a rather awkward dinner party.

0:19.9

Into the Vatican and in a world beset with problems the Pope appears to be keener on saving

0:25.2

the Amazon than allowing married men to become priests. And never mind the wars and the storms,

0:31.4

what about the dangers of the split

0:33.4

infinitive? The murder of a journalist in Malta two years ago

0:38.0

has shone the spotlight on an island of much sunshine and murky business. A prominent businessman has been charged

0:45.6

with complicity to murder and the French are starting an investigation into

0:49.9

his activities. Daphne Galizia's family alleged that Jorg and Fennick use cash from property

0:55.9

deals and race horses to bribe Maltese officials.

0:59.9

Juliet Rix reflects on how the EU smallest country has changed and not for the better.

1:07.0

Malta drives on the same side of the road as the UK, at least sometimes.

1:12.1

There's a saying in this hot Mediterranean country,

1:14.5

we drive on the left,

1:16.0

or wherever the shade is.

1:18.0

And it seems that their traffic police have been following suit,

1:21.0

some distinctly shady practices around overtime and

1:24.4

expenses have led to the arrest of three quarters of the nation's traffic cops.

1:28.7

This may sound scandalous, but it seems like Smallfry beside the broader Baroque goings on amongst Malta's bigger

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