EU Parliament names press room after murdered Maltese journalist
Daphne Caruana Galizia was killed last month in a car bomb after years of reporting deep-rooted corruption in Malta
STRASBOURG:
The European Parliament named its press room in Strasbourg after Daphne Caruana Galizia, the Maltese journalist killed last month in a car bomb after years of reporting allegations of deep-rooted corruption on the island.
On a day when the EU legislature debated a broadly supported resolution questioning the rule of law in Malta and demanding answers on allegations of high-level money laundering made by Caruana Galizia, the ceremony underlined the pressure the Union's smallest state has found itself under since her October 16 murder.
In the auditorium used for news conferences in Parliament's Strasbourg seat, the new name above the door would, Parliament President Antonio Tajani said, ensure that from now on "we will not turn our eyes away from what happened in Malta".
Panama Papers journalist killed in car bomb in Malta
At the Parliament's other home, in Brussels, the press room is named after Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian investigative journalist shot dead in her apartment block in Moscow in 2006 in a killing opposition leaders blamed on the Kremlin.
Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, who had sued Caruana Galizia and one of her sons for libel over allegations of graft, has vowed to track down her killers and insists that the Maltese state is fully compliant with EU standards.
Maltese journalist's son says she was murdered for exposing corruption
Peter Caruana Galizia, the dead journalist's husband, said during the naming ceremony in Strasbourg in the presence of other family members that Malta's political elite had "deep and wide" links to money laundering networks and the country had "slipped further and further away from European values".
The European Parliament named its press room in Strasbourg after Daphne Caruana Galizia, the Maltese journalist killed last month in a car bomb after years of reporting allegations of deep-rooted corruption on the island.
On a day when the EU legislature debated a broadly supported resolution questioning the rule of law in Malta and demanding answers on allegations of high-level money laundering made by Caruana Galizia, the ceremony underlined the pressure the Union's smallest state has found itself under since her October 16 murder.
In the auditorium used for news conferences in Parliament's Strasbourg seat, the new name above the door would, Parliament President Antonio Tajani said, ensure that from now on "we will not turn our eyes away from what happened in Malta".
Panama Papers journalist killed in car bomb in Malta
At the Parliament's other home, in Brussels, the press room is named after Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian investigative journalist shot dead in her apartment block in Moscow in 2006 in a killing opposition leaders blamed on the Kremlin.
Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, who had sued Caruana Galizia and one of her sons for libel over allegations of graft, has vowed to track down her killers and insists that the Maltese state is fully compliant with EU standards.
Maltese journalist's son says she was murdered for exposing corruption
Peter Caruana Galizia, the dead journalist's husband, said during the naming ceremony in Strasbourg in the presence of other family members that Malta's political elite had "deep and wide" links to money laundering networks and the country had "slipped further and further away from European values".