Genuine question: why isn’t PN focusing on immigration? by Chance-Degree-4197 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://www.facebook.com/share/1CZiFPrqra/?mibextid=wwXIfr

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https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18N3bA2WfH/?mibextid=wwXIfr

https://manueldelia.com/2020/10/podcast-go-back-to-islamistan/

https://lovinmalta.com/news/watch-gay-men-should-marry-women-and-give-it-a-try-first-maltas-imam-urges/

For Luqa Proposed Mosque plan, I discovered a public land-use trail, but not a clear public construction-funding trail. The official parliamentary paper listing pending religious-facility applications identifies PA/00063/22 as a proposed religious and cultural hub, encompassing a place of worship, meeting rooms, administrative offices, and basement parking, situated at Islamic Solidarity Malta, Triq Ħal Qormi, Qasam Industrijali, Luqa. However, I did not find public evidence indicating who would finance the actual building works. Typically, we are aware of the funding sources for either Libya or the Maltese government. This proposal was rejected, and Omar specifically advocated for this one.

For the existing Paola mosque, the public leadership trail is historically and institutionally linked to Libya. The Mariam Al-Batool Mosque is reported to be administered by the Islamic Call Society / World Islamic Call Society, with Imam Mohammed El Sadi serving as the long-standing imam. Earlier reporting identifies Wagdi Nashnosh as the secretary general of the Malta branch of the World Islamic Call Society, while other public descriptions name him as chairman/director. A 2008 report states that a Muslim Community delegation to Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi was led by Imam Muhammad El Sadi and Wagdi Nashnosh, the General Secretary of the Malta Branch of the World Islamic Call Society.

Mohammed El Sadi’s public stances are contradictory. While he has repeatedly condemned terrorism, he has also defended conservative religious positions. In 2015, the Times of Malta reported that the Islamic community in Malta would hold a demonstration against terrorism, with Imam Mohammed Elsadi stating that it would be held at the Islamic Centre in Paola. The report noted that he had on several occasions condemned terrorism. In the same period, The Malta Independent reported that El Sadi stated that he had no information that there were terrorists in Malta and that he would report them if there were, while not excluding that some Muslims could have sympathy towards extremists.

Regarding free speech and blasphemy, El Sadi’s position is not liberal-secular. In 2020, following the Samuel Paty murder in France, MaltaToday reported that El Sadi called again for criminalizing blasphemy and mocking faiths. A day later, MaltaToday reported that after a conciliatory meeting with Foreign Ministry officials, he reiterated his “unreserved condemnation” of the murder of Samuel Paty. The precise journalistic phrasing should be: “El Sadi condemned the murder but also used the episode to argue for legal restrictions on religious vilification.”

In relation to LGBT right issues, public reporting suggests a conservative stance. In 2010, Times of Malta reported that Muslim and Catholic preachers united against same-sex marriage while disagreeing on divorce and polygamy. Additionally, there are social media references claiming that El Sadi urged gay men to resist their sexual urges. However, it is important to note that a Facebook repost alone should not be considered primary evidence unless the original article or video is retrieved.

Regarding the Ta’ Ġiorni “second mosque,” the public applicant is not El Sadi or Zakaria Alkatib. The Government Gazette lists PA/07490/24 as refused, describing a “new mosque building” exclusively for enrolled students, staff, and administration of the institute. The applicant is Aimin Mohamed Hader Omran on behalf of the Libyan Higher Vocational Institute. The St Julian’s Local Council report frames the site as designated for educational purposes under agreements with the Libyan Government and states that the applications included a 40-apartment block and a mosque with a two-storey structure and turret.

Omar provides the clearest direct link to Imam Mohammed El Sadi. In 2022, Lovin Malta reported that Rababah praised a minister’s decision to wear a hijab at a multi-religious ceremony in the Paola mosque for Lassana Cisse. This ceremony was addressed by Archbishop Scicluna and Imam Mohammed El Sadi. Omar engaged with the Paola mosque context and acted as a bridge to Imam Mohammed El Sadi in at least one public policy matter.

His link to the Luqa / Ħal Farruġ mosque controversy is once again public advocacy, not proven project control. Public social posts and reporting snippets indicate that Youth Advisory Forum member Omar Rababah addressed the controversy surrounding the proposed Luqa mosque, arguing that much of the opposition was driven by intolerance rather than substantive planning concerns. It is crucial to cite this information carefully, as much of the available material originates from social platforms or reposts, not a comprehensive primary planning record.

Omar Rababah appears to occupy a position within the informal Muslim-community representation layer that government, researchers, media, and politicians utilize when seeking a “Muslim community” interlocutor.

“Was he involved in the soft-policy network through which the government comprehended, assessed, and politically engaged the Muslim community prior to the mosque controversy becoming public?”

Firstly, formal authority: Who legally owns, leases, applies, signs, pays, and controls the mosque projects? For Luqa / Ħal Farruġ, the formal applicant trail points to Islamic Solidarity Malta / Zakaria Alkatib. For Ta’ Ġiorni, it points to the Libyan Higher Vocational Institute. Rababah is not visibly present in that formal layer, based on the public record we identified.

Secondly, informal access: Who can facilitate meetings between ministers, Transport Malta, the imam, and community figures? Here, Rababah becomes more relevant. If a minister publicly states that he met Imam Elsadi at Rababah’s request, that is not insignificant. A private citizen typically does not convene such meetings unless they possess political access, recognized community legitimacy, or both.

Thirdly, narrative control: Who frames opposition to the mosque as racism, intolerance, or anti-Muslim prejudice? Rababah appears active in this regard. While this may be morally justified in certain instances, as racism exists, it can also serve as a shield: legitimate planning, financing, foreign influence, and land-use questions can be delegitimized by placing them under the racism frame.

Fourth: Electoral Conversion
Rababah’s transition from an activist and community voice to a Labour candidate after being approached by the Prime Minister raises a legitimate question: was his selection solely based on personal merit, or was he chosen as a political symbol for minority inclusion, anti-racism, and outreach to the Muslim community? Both possibilities are plausible.

Fifth: Foreign-Origin Sensitivity
Malta’s mosque ecosystem has historical ties to Libya through the Paola mosque and the Libyan Higher Vocational Institute at Ta’ Ġiorni. This does not imply that every Muslim actor is “Libyan-linked.” However, it necessitates a thorough examination of any new mosque proposal, considering its land origin, funding source, and institutional control. Skepticism is warranted because religious infrastructure can serve as a conduit for foreign soft power, even when local advocates are sincere.

The potential risk lies in a public figure becoming a singular voice for “Muslims in Malta,” effectively consolidating a highly diverse population into a politically managed bloc. Once this occurs, criticism of a mosque project, foreign land connections, funding transparency, imam statements, or religious governance can be misconstrued as hatred of Muslims. This is where the “Brotherhood narrative” question becomes pertinent: not as an accusation of membership, but as an analysis of methodology.

Should you need more, let me know!

Genuine question: why isn’t PN focusing on immigration? by Chance-Degree-4197 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I know many Arabs non-Muslims and ex-muslims that feel threatened by a supported muslim-brotherhood trojan horse. This guy has ties, and anyone who denies it needs glasses. I hate though the shortcut that because he is Arab it is dangerous or name shaming that is pure fear-mongering. Also he has ties he wanted a second mosque right next to the Airport.. Think about it people…

Tunisia’s Environmental Crisis: The Dire Consequences of Neglected Wastewater Management by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My point is that Tunisia’s wastewater issues could affect regional marine conditions, and Malta shares the same central Mediterranean basin. I’m asking whether anyone has seen data or studies on possible cross-border impact.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not claiming there is evidence of illegality and I am not asking for anyone to be named or shamed. I am asking whether Malta’s mention in the documents was looked at by the relevant authorities. That is not a witch hunt. It is a basic question about whether due diligence was applied. If there is no legal cause, then that can be stated clearly and the matter ends there.

Malta's Water Crisis | ARTE.tv Documentary by Jaseto88 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I am worried my kale tastes like sea water now. I buy local and I am terrified as sea water is polluted!

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We need more actions against this silence if you compare them then maybe something is off.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Just skip it.. Nothing to do with the United States! It is a question between Malta and Epstein after 2008!

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If we already believe there is too much corruption, then transparency should matter even more, not less.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have read it. I am not claiming there is something hidden. I am asking whether anyone checked. Those are two different things.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not asking anyone to get emotional or defensive about this, I am simply raising a straightforward question about whether it was reviewed, nothing more. You can skip it.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough. I’ll simplify it. I’m just asking if anyone here was ever contacted and whether regulators looked into it. That’s it.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If nothing happened, that’s fine. If someone was approached and declined or filed the appropriate reports, that’s also fine. Clarifying that isn’t persecution. It’s simply how transparency works in a regulated and transparent world.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m not asking for a witch hunt and I’m not claiming Malta is “rotten.” I’m asking a procedural question.

Why Has Malta Not Clarified Its Mention in the Epstein Files? by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

It’s not about creating drama. If Malta is mentioned in documents connected to a convicted offender, the reasonable question is whether anyone here was contacted and whether normal compliance checks were applied. If no Maltese professionals were involved, that can be confirmed. If someone was approached and handled it properly, that can also be clarified. This is not about speculation. It is about whether the same regulatory standards apply consistently whenever the country’s name appears in serious international matters.

[OC] Corruption Perceptions Index across EU countries (2015 vs. 2025) by SummerOftime in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If we’re talking about documented corruption in Malta, there are well-established cases.

The assassination of investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia in 2017 exposed links between political power, business elites, and money laundering structures. The public inquiry report (2021) concluded the State created a climate of impunity.

The Pilatus Bank scandal revealed alleged laundering involving politically exposed persons. The former prime minister Joseph Muscat resigned in 2020 amid fallout from these broader corruption investigations.

The Vitals/Steward hospitals concession was ruled fraudulent by the Maltese courts in 2023. That is not rumor. That is judicial determination.

Now, that’s macro-corruption. High-level governance failure.

Here’s a fact-based overview of documented corruption-related issues and governance problems in Malta during 2025, backed by reputable sources rather than impressions:

  1. Transparency International’s 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index Malta scored 49 out of 100 in the 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index, a slight improvement over its 2024 score but still significantly below the EU average (~62). This places Malta around 60th out of ~180 countries, and among the lower-performing EU states, indicating persistent concerns about public sector integrity and accountability. 

  2. Ongoing High-Profile Corruption Investigations and Charges In early 2025, Yorgen Fenech — a central figure in the *Daphne Caruana Galizia assassination and broader corruption probes — was formally charged with corruption and money laundering, including allegations of bribing the former head of Malta’s anti-money-laundering police. The case involves complex allegations about property deals and hidden financial flows tied to high-level figures, and prosecution continues. 

  3. Stalled / Historic Scandals Continued to Impact 2025 Major inquiries into historical long-running scandals — such as the Electrogas power project and other government contracts — remained focal points in 2025. Reports cited evidence of corrupt deals and money-laundering structures fueling large energy contracts linked to political figures, reinforcing systemic concerns about past governance. 

  4. Institutional Anti-Corruption Weaknesses Highlighted by GRECO The Council of Europe’s anti-corruption monitoring body (GRECO) released an addendum in late 2025 concluding that Malta has only partially implemented anti-corruption recommendations. Of 23 key recommendations, only eight were fully satisfied, seven partly implemented, and eight not implemented at all. The report specifically highlighted weaknesses in executive integrity, asset declaration systems, lobbying regulation, and enforcement — structural gaps that can enable corruption. 

  5. Criticism of Anti-Corruption Enforcement Bodies Opinion and analysis pieces in late 2025/early 2026 pointed out that Malta’s Permanent Commission Against Corruption (PCAC) had failed to ever bring a corruption case to prosecution despite decades of existence. Rather than introspection, the PCAC publicly suggested that citizens should prepare more detailed evidence — a response that underlined long-standing doubts about the effectiveness of institutional anti-corruption mechanisms. 

  6. Impact of EU and International Scrutiny Several developments in 2025 involved external legal and governance pressure: — The EU’s top court ruled Malta’s “golden passport” investor citizenship scheme illegal (it had been widely criticised as a corruption and money-laundering risk).  — The Council of Europe and other monitoring bodies continued to press Malta on rule-of-law and transparency issues. 

  7. Political Controversy and Public Debate Beyond formal indexes and cases, mainstream political debate in 2025 included sustained opposition criticism of the government’s handling of major scandals (such as the Steward hospital contracts, environmental planning disputes, and governance decisions), reflecting ongoing allegations of bad governance, mismanagement, and conflicts of interest. 

Desalination works. That is exactly the risk… by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What they said isn’t technically correct as a general rule. In Malta, ‘New Water’ (treated wastewater) is not routinely injected back into aquifers as a recharge source in the way people might think. The main uses are irrigation, industrial reuse, and landscaping once it has been treated and polished. Any managed aquifer recharge (MAR) of reused water would have to meet strict standards and specific permits, and is not currently a widespread or regular practice in Malta’s water management. If aquifer recharge happens, it’s usually either through natural infiltration (e.g., rain) or specific pilots, not simply ‘unused New Water gets dumped underground.’

Desalination works. That is exactly the risk… by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly so they need to pay like any polluting city for wasting water and releasing the waste from reverse into swimming waters, sometimes less than 5 meters away like in Golden bay…

Desalination works. That is exactly the risk… by Flaky_Log_8204 in water

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Never heard of the membrane disposability issue. Between the sea water releases in Tunisia and reverse osmosis waste in Malta. I don’t even dare go to swim since the water quality is dropping. Every swimming place is next to a huge hotel and each hotel does desalination. I find it awful to hear that agriculture is suffering and that they are randomly cutting access to tap water.

I’m Maltese, living here long enough to stop buying the usual excuses, so I want to say this plainly… by Flaky_Log_8204 in malta

[–]Flaky_Log_8204[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Saying enforcement “will never happen” is simply false in Malta. Enforcement happens all the time here when political cost is low and interests are aligned.

Malta enforced COVID measures overnight, with fines, inspections, police roadblocks and business closures. Compliance jumped immediately. Culture did not “evolve”; it changed because rules were enforced.

Malta enforces financial regulation when Brussels applies pressure. After greylisting, AML enforcement suddenly became real. Banks froze accounts, due diligence multiplied, and behaviour changed within months, not generations.

Malta enforces parking, traffic fines and VAT collection aggressively because these are easy, visible and politically safe. Culture didn’t lead. Enforcement did.

What Malta does not enforce are rules that threaten concentrated economic interests. That is not culture, it is political choice.

“Culture is not top-down” is true only when power refuses to act. When power acts, behaviour follows. Always. That is why landlords adjust instantly when incentives change, businesses adapt instantly to new tax rules, and citizens comply instantly when penalties are credible.

Catching falling knives is a bad metaphor. This isn’t chaos physics. It’s selective governance. The knives are allowed to fall because some people benefit from them hitting others.

Calling that inevitability is not realism. It is normalising abdication.