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J'accuse : Tunnel vision indeed

Much as I respect Chris Said and his work, I cannot help thinking that the whole “let’s build a tunnel from Malta to Gozo” is the latest in a series of red herrings commissioned specifically by Gonzi’s PN. Ever since the hullabaloo about the Coupé Convertible Opera House subsided, there has been a desperate scramble for another controversy of the pointlessly popular kind. I was worried for a second that the Nationalists would resort to streaking MPs in Parliament just for the sake of not having to get down to the nitty-gritty of resolving the Gordian knot of divorce (Gordian from a conservative point of view). Instead we get “an immediate, in-depth technical and financial assessment of the tunnel idea”.

It sounds so Yes, Minister, doesn’t it? Actually “in-depth” studies are step five of the 12-step delaying tactics as described by Sir Humphrey (the full list being: informal discussions, draft proposal, preliminary study, discussion document, in-depth study, revised proposal, policy statement, strategy proposal, discussion of strategy, implementation plan circulated, revised implementation plans, and cabinet agreement). Needless to say, most ideas drown somewhere along the way, never to resurface – the mere supporting of the idea having won the relevant minister the necessary brownie points in his constituency.

I may have mixed feelings about the tunnel myself, but I will not be drawn into discussing the usefulness of a €150 million project right now. This is not to say that the project might merit discussion at some point in time in future and wealthier days (‘future’ being the key word here). The feeling I get is that, notwithstanding His Master’s Voice’s efforts to prod its readers into discussing this project, it has been given as much serious consideration as the fact that Malawi’s government is about to outlaw farting in public.

In the dark

I don’t know why they bothered with this tunnel business, really. I mean, the rules of the game perforce mean that we are constantly given the choice of bulk buying plus one (that makes it two products and only two) when it comes to election options. Right now, all Gonzi’s PN have to worry about, come election time, is that they are seen to be a better solution for government than the PL. Easy-peasy really, since Joseph Muscat has been all over the place trying to dispel any leftover worries that he could actually be the chosen one.

We have already assessed his sensibility on the international scene, thanks to his brainwave regarding tourism theft from the ailing Maghreb and Mashrek. This week we also learnt that the brand new Labour’s election manifesto will be drawn up by an old hat of the tried and tested variety. It’s not a question of character assassination, as the victims of criticism are so ready to point out these days, it’s a question of a running curriculum vitae and, frankly, Karmenu Vella’s doesn’t quite fit the bill, does it?

For all their talk of grass root openness and discussion, both parties are really milking the constitutional advantage of a virtual numerus clausus on parliamentary representation. The Nationalist Party discusses basic issues and projects behind closed doors, leaving the Academy for the Development of a Democratic Environment (AZAD) floundering as a token think tank, while Labour commissions the one-man authorship of an election manifesto, completely ignoring the fact that it is supposed to have a fledgling think tank of its own that should supposedly be the prime contributor at this stage (Fondazzjoni IDEAT).

Double insularity?

The tunnel project would end Gozo’s supposed affliction (personally, I think of it as benediction) of double-insularity but, unfortunately for the Gozitans, they will only be linked to Malta and I doubt whether there is any truth in the idea that this would limit the “sister island’s” insularity. Certain mentalities are hard to ditch and a tunnel to the land of partisan crassness loses much of its charm, doesn’t it? That hundreds of Labour’s partisans stood by Joseph Muscat’s rant about Egypt and Tunisia says much about how far the core voter base will stick to their party, come hell or high water. They were not being asked to vote against him, mind you, just disagree. Yet the only answer I came across was “even the Nationalists took advantage of Greece by making a profit on the loans”.

Really? Which part of “all of Europe lent money to the Greeks” did these Labourites miss? Did they not notice that Joseph’s position sticks out as madly as a Mintoff position in his heyday and makes us look like complete jerks? Or they probably did, and the similarity brought out misty-eyed feelings of nostalgia that further compounded the sad truth that we are really two realities living on one island and that there is no way out – no, not even with a tunnel to Pozzallo.

Underwater

The divorce position has forced hitherto unseen cracks in the modus operandi of both parties. For the first time we are seeing the possibility of parties “taking a position” on an issue without, however, binding their members to vote one way or another in Parliament. Cake and eating it comes to mind. Although Malta’s myriad experts and thinkers have rushed to the Pavlovian reflex of drawing up the pro and anti tribes in a jiffy, the divorce question has, more than any other issue, exposed the limits of ‘umbrella politics’ within both parties. It was the ‘anything goes’ policy of the Nationalist Party candidate selection before the election (not to mention the Mistra Crusade and JPO’s crocodile tears with the whole party behind him) that led them into this unprincipled corner.

Needless to say, progressive Joseph is as progressive as Karl Marx in his coffin for the very same reason. Too many contradictory strands of politics (if they may be called politics) are harboured within his party. The magic number of 50 per cent plus one haunts the PLPN in every step of their operation. They are constantly too fixated with garnering votes to be able to concentrate on the politics. Sure, the Daphnes of this world can croon that better a haphazard government of the relative majority than a throwback to Mintoff’s Club once again, but the truth remains that both parties are spineless when it comes to being principled representatives (bar anything short of miraculous happening next Thursday in the PN camp).

Yes, Austin is right. A party should take a position based on its principles and that should be a condition for membership of the party and for contesting elections within the ranks of the party. If JPO leaves the PN ranks and keeps his seat in Parliament, the PN cannot cry foul: they backed him ferociously (and unfairly) to get into Parliament and, lest they misread the Constitution, it is his seat, not theirs.

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Building bridges?

For reasons completely unrelated to J’accuse’s bias towards a multi-party environment, I strongly believe that AD’s strength this time around is its consistency on yet another social issue. AD has been pro-divorce and has no qualms about declaring it. Notwithstanding the dearth of manpower and the unfortunate lack of plucky charisma that constantly plagues the party, AD has proven to be the only party in Malta that is able never to compromise its principles for votes. I argued this week on the blog that, given the dearth of principled parties in our politics, this might be the time for AD to aspire higher than simply being a third party. It is the time for AD to aspire to become a main party in its own right – to the detriment of one of the other two, of course. Unfortunately, the voting public has proved to be as discerning a public as a gathering of Inter supporters, which means that we are heading straight down the tunnel of unprincipled representation, come 2013.

Outside, in the real world, Jordan seems to be next in line in the wave of revolutions in the Arab world. The Egyptian movement has given us a new twist. For the first time, social networking on the Internet reacted to the revolutions and not vice versa. With the Internet down, Google collaborated with Twitter in order to allow Egyptians to tweet via phone lines. An interesting development – it is these times of revolution that could provoke a speedier change than we are already witnessing.

That’s all this week from gloomy Luxembourg.

www.akkuza.com – daily blogging for free public consumption.

ADDENDUM:

And his Master’s Voice is fast at work, eager to dispel the idea that this is just an exercise in mental entertainment. The Times carried an article yesterday entitled “Gozitans welcome tunnel idea”. Well J’accuse welcomes the idea too but does not believe the timing. On the other hand you really have to ask what made the Times dish out the superlatives such as:

“Massive support for the proposal was shown this morning but it was pointed out that Gozitans should have a very big say in the decision. They proposed a referendum in Gozo to see where Gozitans stood on the issue.”

Really? So what exactly is the “massive support” if a referendum is needed? then the GRTU came out strongly in favour of the tunnel. If you consider Vince Farrugia a strong unbiased voice that is. On the other hand, if you remember that Vince was part of the umbrella coalition for MEP votes then you might think again. The Times’ eagerness to shower plaudits was unbridled:

Some of the organisations in Gozo had already appointed sub-committees to work on the proposal, while a survey held by the GTA found had 90 per cent support of members of the Gozo Tourism Authority.

I bet the Xewkija Tigers social committee got an early head start on that one. And you’ve got to love the survey by the GTA (Gozo Tourism Authority) that obtained 90% support of the … wait for it… Gozo Tourism Authority.

As for copying Nordic countries, the last time we experimented with their ideas in the Fliegu we ended up with flat bottomed boats that were ideal for fjords but that rocked like crazy whenever the Libeccio was here to stay.

Could do better.

Categories
Mediawatch

J'accuse on One News

J’accuse featured on Sunday night’s ONE news item about the cyber warfare going on in Egypt. Here is the item in question:

Categories
Zolabytes

The Media and Egypt

ONE NEWS REPORTER Anthony David Gatt wrote this as a facebook note. J’accuse is posting it as a zolabyte with the author’s kind permission. It is his take on how the media – local and foreign – has dealt with the Egyptian uprising. As Anthony says, this note is a look at what is happening from the journalist’s point of view as well as at the effects of media. The floor is open for discussion.

L-Egittu: rajnieh u wassalnieh

L-Egittu kien fuq fomm kullhadd fl-ahhar jiem. Habba li l-pajjiz huwa tant vicin taghna, minhabba ir-rappurtagg kontinwu fuq l-istazzjoniet tal-ahabrijiet u permezz ta-Twitter u Facebook, hassejna lilna nfusna eqreb tal-izviluppi. F’din in-nota tajt harsa lejn dak li qed jigri mill-lenti gurnalistika u l-effetti tal-midja.

Kardashians flok Tahrir

Wahda fost l-aktar mossi medjatici importanti f’dawn id-dimostrazzjonijiet kienet id-decizjoni tal-Al Jazeera English li jwasslu xandira diretta bla waqfien mill-Egittu. Dan filwaqt li l-istazzjonijiet l-ohra kollha, jew kellhom problemi biex jxandru jew ma tawx l-importanza li din l-istorja sthoqqitila mill-ewwel. Tant li fuq CNN fl-ewwel jiem tal-gimgha, meta kollox deher li beda jeskala, ghal xi hinijiet dehru l-Kardashians jitkellmu fuq fettuqiet flok iz-zghazagh Egizzjani jiggieldu ghal-drittijiethom. AJE tassew wasslu rappurtagg tajjeb u reali mit-toroq tal-Kajr, Lixandra u bliet ohra. Dehret id-differenza mill-midja l-ohra, kellhom iktar access ghal sorsi politici gharab ghaliex l-istazzjon ewlieni ta’ din n-network beda bl-Gharbi u huwa iccentrallizat mal-hajja Gharbija.

AJE

Dehret differenza wkoll bejn l-mod kif l-midja amerikana titratta l-korrispondenti ewlenin bhal Anderson Cooper u Hala Gorani tas-CNN. Il-kjass li qam meta gew attakkati, mhux ghax gew attakati gurnalisti u l-ghajb ta’ azzjoni bhal din, izda ghax gew attakati ismijiet kbar. Fuq huffingtonpost rajna artikli shah “Anderson Cooper attacked”, “Anderson Cooper admits he is afraid”, anke jien semmejt l-fatt li gie aggredit fir-rappurtagg tieghi. Izda minn jaf x’raw ma wicchom kemm l-gurnalist bla isem fl-ahhar jiem? Ghal AJE ma kienx importanti l-glorifikazzjoni tal-korrispondent daqs is-sahha tal-kontenut. In-newsanchor gieli inghaqdet ma korrispondent minn nofs pjazza Tahrir minghajr ma semmiet ismu. Forsi bhala mizura ta’ sigurta’, imma hi x’inhi kienet sistema li hadmet u li tat lill din in-network status qawwi tul ir-rappurtagg shih.

Internet bahh

Twitter rega ghamilha. Nies tweetjaw minn djarhom biex nbdew l-protesti, tweetjaw minn pjazza Tahrir, u mit-toroq tal-Kajr sakemm inqata l-internet. Hekk cum bum. Waqaf kollox. Jum minnhom qed niccettja ma kollega tieghi u qaltli ezatt x’ghaddiet minnu fil-jiem tal-protesti u l-ghada bahh. Fuq tweetpic rajt ritratt ta’ kif il-graph tat-traffiku tal-internet waqghet minn mija fil-mija ghal-tnax fil-mija. Izda Facebbok u Twitter fil-bqija tad-dinja baqghu ghaddejjin u whud mic-cellulari fl-Egittu kienu ghadhom joperaw wkoll. Allura zghazugh minn Kalifornja espert fil-qasam tal-kommunikazzjoni u li ghandu shabu fl-Egittu u kemm il-darba mar hemm, haseb sew x’jista jghamel u ghamilha! Talab lill kull min ried jikkomunika mill-Egittu biex jcempel u jghaddi messagg fuq sistema jew jibghat sms. Hu imbghad jaqlibhom fi tweets jew jahllihom bhala vuci. Il-bniedem rega dawwar il-bieb imsabbat f’wiccu tat-teknologija… f’id ta’ ghajnuna b’sahhitha u soda.

Ghax ma nintervistax lill Mubarak?

Impressjonajt ruhi wkoll bil-mument ta’ ispirazzjoni ta’ Christiane Amanpour li telqet mis-CNN u issa qieghda l-ABC. Kienet qed thares lejn l-cameraperson taghha bilqieghda qabel ma jintervistaw il-Vici President l-gdid, u hasbet bejna u bejn ruhha… ghalfejn ma nintervistawx lill Mubarak. L-iktar haga ovja u semplici, u fl-istess hin l-haga li qass tghaddilek minn mohhok f’miljuni ta’ snin f’dik l-atmosfera. Mubarak kien hemm biss biex jghajruh u biex jghati diskorsi mistennija b’herqa u jerga jghib. Mhux biex jkun normali u jitkellem ma persuna ohra, ma gurnalista! Ghodda ta’ propaganada jew le, ghalija l-intervista ghinitu, ghallinqas f’ghajnejja. Kif spjegajt lill Stephen Calleya, Kap tal-MEDAC, jien nhares lejh minn zewg perspettivi… minn naha bhala tirann kattiv kif pengewuli u lilna l-Egizzjan,i u minn naha l-ohra bhala statista li ghalkemm imperfett ghad ghandu f’qalbu lill dawk li forsi xi darba kienu uliedu u ma jridx jitfa pajjiz fl-abissi. Mghomi bil-biza tal-izlamizmu jrid jibqa fil-kariga u jiehu hsieb, mqar ghalissa.

Ovvju

Dan apparti li jkun superfluwu li nsemmu kemm gurnalisti tal-midja tradizzjonali gabu informazzjoni u vidjos minn fuq twitter u youtube bis-sahha tac-citizen journalists fit-triq. Dan l-fenomenu issa nafuh sew, kull ma nistghu nghidu hu li gie rikonfermat u issa zgur li m’hemm ebda dubju tas-sahhat ta’ din it-tip ta’ midja gdida.

Gurnalizmu bil-‘G’ kbira

Kellna wkoll l-interess rari tal-gurnalisti Maltin. Karl Stagno Navvarra ha d-decizjoni li insemmghu lehinnha ghal-kif shabna fl-Egittu qed jissawtu, jigu arrestati u mwaqqfa minn xoghlhom. Karl ghamel tajjeb. Izda l-‘protesta’ quddiem l-ambaxxata Egizzjana saret f’hin hazin u mhux hafna minnha setghu jattendu. Whud li setghu m’attendewx, ghaliex forsi jahsbu li dan kollu teatrin ghalxejn. Forsi mhux kullhadd kellu l-kilba li jmur l-Egittu, forsi ghal hafna l-gurnalizmu ghandu l-‘g’ zghira.

*****
Zolabytes is a rubrique on J’accuse – the name is a nod to the original J’accuser (Emile Zola) and a building block of the digital age (byte). Zolabytes is intended to be a collection of guest contributions in the spirit of discussion that has been promoted by J’accuse on the online Maltese political scene for 5 years.
Opinions expressed in zolabyte contributions are those of the author in question. Opinions appearing on zolabytes do not necessarily reflect the editorial line of J’accuse the blog.
***

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Categories
Mediawatch

Snapshot: Church & State

I just had to post this again. It’s a photo taken from the (currently comatose) blog “il-manoċċa” of a newspaper poster from “il-Gens” which has since switched to being an e-paper. In these times of lay vs church battles and humanists and saints this photo tends to summarise it all neatly.

Next Christ the King

For the non-Maltese readers the poster reads as follows:

THIS MORNING UNIONS IN ANOTHER MEETING WITH THE PRIME MINISTER

next heading: TOMORROW CHRIST THE KING

priceless.

Categories
Mediawatch

Balcony, Oh Balcony

Wikipedia’s post on balconies interestingly mentions specifically the “Maltese Balcony” as an example. Even more interesting was the origins of the word “balcony” itself from the Persian “بالكانه bālkāneh” which got me wondering whether Xerxes and Ataxerxes were into the habit of using balconies on solemn occasions.

Historically the balcony has had an important role through the ages. One of the most famous balconies of all time was the scene in Verona where the son and daughter of rival houses played out the age-old ceremony of courting. Balconies though are more associated with power and glory. Famous balconies such as that at Buckingham Palace from which the Royal Family have saluted the brave public in good and bad times or the Vatican balcony of “habemus papam” fame promptly come to mind.

Michael Jackson, God bless his soul, dared eclipse the Brandenburg Gate‘s symbolic importance by dangling his very own son out of the balcony of a Berlin Hotel that has henceforth become a tourist attraction.

This week I read in Italy’s La Stampa that Mussolini‘s famous balcony from which he proclaimed war on the Allies in WWII has been re-opened for the first time since 1943. The balcony, the article read, is no longer taboo. Closer to home one of the myriad cosmetic changes ordered by Joseph Muscat during his reign was the ordering of a celebratory balcony for the electoral win that was yet to come.

Romeo and Juliet, Popes, Mussolini, the Royal Family, Michael Jackson… the thing with balconies is that it is not the balconies themselves that make the person but rather vice-versa. Which probably means that judging by his current performance, Joseph Muscat’s balcony is doomed to being just another architectural eyesore in Mile End.

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Categories
Divorce Politics

Humpty Dumpty Politics

What makes or breaks a modern political party? Can we still talk of the terms “christian-democrat” and “socialist” (or the masacara “progressive”) when it comes to the nitty-gritty of politics in Malta? Is it just Malta that has entered a Bermuda Triangle of party values?

The nationalist party might hold the “Fehmiet Bazici” (Basic Beliefs) document to its heart but how is it to reconcile that with the calculated vote grabbing net that is elaborated every five years? Joseph Muscat may have declared a new era of progressive liberals but his party is having a hard time trying to appease the weird animal that is the “conservative proletariat”.

The “socialists” were never socialist to begin with. Even at the worst of the church-Labour battles their worry over the fact of being buried in non-consecrated ground or their sacristy marriages betrayed their Peppone like interior. Beneath the wannabe socialist revolutionaries were Catholics who were really stung by the fundamentalist church moves. Had they really been convinced of their socialist, lay battles they wouldn’t have given two hoots about being interdicted from a church that was supposedly not theirs.

The nationalist party lost its moral compass right after 1987. It was on a life-saving machine all through the EU campaign having placed its bets on the right horse but once the fog of the EU War subsided (thank you very much Waste-Our-Bloody-Time-Sant) it fell apart like Humpty Dumpty – unable to string together a coherent plan of action and a victim of the Young Battlers of the EU Campaign clamouring for a piece of the victorious pie of government. The worldwide economic crisis did the rest of the trick.

So when an issue like divorce hits the parties when they least expect it, they are unable to react as political parties. Or at least it seems so. James Debono has done a(nother) wonderful job of assessing the different scenarios with regards to divorce and the two main parties: “Divorce: When principles and convenience collide“. Even if we were to set aside the issue itself (divorce) and focus on the party reactions to what is basically a “principle” or “value” changer in society the results are rather bleak.

The stand taken by Austin Gatt might be old hat but it is after all what you’d expect from a party MP. Austin’s stand is about the PN stand not about what Malta thinks. He is spot on when he says that if he (Austin) disagrees with divorce legislation then he cannot fit in within a party that actively promotes divorce legislation. J’accuse would go one further. Resign from the PN in case it decides to back divorce legislation but do not resign from parliament.

Paul Borg Olivier’s recent interview on Dissett points to a possible development for the PN. It is the possibility of acknowledging that the party itself is in favour/against divorce but leaving its members free to vote. The question J’accuse would like to ask is: Does this count as a party position on values? Is the acknowledgement that a discussion such as divorce is one that has both pro- and con- partisans within the same party sufficient to say that party values are safe?

Even Labour, with what is supposed to be a less confessional set of values (actually it claims to be progressive) has difficulties taking a stand on divorce. Granted that there is no denying that Joseph Muscat’s Labour has a proven track record of opportunistic bandwagon politics this particular nut will be a tough one to crack. Muscat has his own Gatt on his side of parliament (Adrian Vassallo) and surely other conservative proletarians will follow suit.

Which leaves us with Alternattiva Demokratika. What started off as a party with a strong green agenda at the time of its affiliation with the Verdi/Greens can now boast of a wealth of political positions in the social sphere – from property rights to gender issues to divorce. The party position is unequivocal and clear: they want divorce legislation.

The D’Hondt relative majority has done much to whittle away the party backbone for the party in government. It lives each day nervously wondering which backbencher (or government member) might step out of line and threaten the fragile structure that is at wits end. It has gone from “Par Idejn Sodi” (a pair of strong hands) to “Kuljum bir-Roghda” (everyday shaking). The PL is at sea trying to desperately loop in any possible voter and trying not to tread on anyone’s toes in case their vote is needed come d-day. Which leaves us with a gaggle of spineless politicians unable to take a clear stand on matters that count. Or does it?

J’accuse believes that for the first time Alternattiva Demokratika has a chance to assert itself as something more than a party aspiring for the third place. The l vacuum opened up by the PLPN (ironically as a direct result of their tweaking of the D’Hondt Relative Majority) opens up the same possibilities as those seen by the UK Liberal Democrats before the last elections. AD should no longer aspire to be a third party. On paper, it has every right and chance to aspire to be a major role player in the next elections and technically it should be the most spineless of the PLPN duo that suffers.

That of course does not take into account the partisan vote base. Which will stick to its PLPN guns come hell or highwater… or come divorce.