Three months ago to the day, a bomb shattered the peaceful surroundings of Bidnija. The violent shatter did more than just shatter the peaceful surrounding the beautiful valley itself. It shattered the illusion that our country was a normal democracy with heated debates.
Three months ago to the day, the life of Daphne Caruana Galizia came to a horrid and violent end. In life Caruana Galizia never shied away from calling a spade the way she seed it; even if doing so made her enemies; very powerful enemies. Caruana Galizia never shied away from making her arguments in her own inimitable style; she never shied away from investigative journalism no matter how risky such journalism got.
Many had moments where they disagreed with what she wrote; sometimes intensely disagreed with what she wrote. Many felt that on occasions her colourful style was perhaps not appropriate to the occasion in question. Despite these moments of disagreement many however saw in her the personification of liberty of expression. Daphne Caruana Galizia personified our right to ask questions of those in authority, our right to demand high ethical and moral standards from those in authority, our right to demand accountability as a right and not as an electoral pledge, our right to make our grievances heard even when such grievances concern the highest of authorities.
The bomb that shattered the peaceful surrounding of Bidnija and took away the life of the journalist that was Daphne Caruana Galizia also took away the illusion that our democracy is functioning in a normal manner where debates may get heated but where democracy, freedom, accountability, freedom of expression and meritocracy are a given.
Daphne’s death however should not lead us to give in or give up hope. On the contrary it should fuel in us the passion and energy needed to defend these basic rights we hold so dear. If we can defend democracy, liberty, freedom of expression, accountability and meritocracy than at least Daphne’s death will “only” be a sad reminder of a dark moment in our history when the life of a journalist, a mother, a wife, a daughter, a sister was taken away in such a horrific manner. It will not mark the day when our country fell so far down the slippery slope that to call ourselves a European democracy verges on hallucination level. Whether it shall be the former or the latter is entirely up to us.
Three months ago to the day, the life of Daphne Caruana Galizia came to a horrid and violent end. In life Caruana Galizia never shied away from calling a spade the way she seed it; even if doing so made her enemies; very powerful enemies. Caruana Galizia never shied away from making her arguments in her own inimitable style; she never shied away from investigative journalism no matter how risky such journalism got.
Many had moments where they disagreed with what she wrote; sometimes intensely disagreed with what she wrote. Many felt that on occasions her colourful style was perhaps not appropriate to the occasion in question. Despite these moments of disagreement many however saw in her the personification of liberty of expression. Daphne Caruana Galizia personified our right to ask questions of those in authority, our right to demand high ethical and moral standards from those in authority, our right to demand accountability as a right and not as an electoral pledge, our right to make our grievances heard even when such grievances concern the highest of authorities.
The bomb that shattered the peaceful surrounding of Bidnija and took away the life of the journalist that was Daphne Caruana Galizia also took away the illusion that our democracy is functioning in a normal manner where debates may get heated but where democracy, freedom, accountability, freedom of expression and meritocracy are a given.
Daphne’s death however should not lead us to give in or give up hope. On the contrary it should fuel in us the passion and energy needed to defend these basic rights we hold so dear. If we can defend democracy, liberty, freedom of expression, accountability and meritocracy than at least Daphne’s death will “only” be a sad reminder of a dark moment in our history when the life of a journalist, a mother, a wife, a daughter, a sister was taken away in such a horrific manner. It will not mark the day when our country fell so far down the slippery slope that to call ourselves a European democracy verges on hallucination level. Whether it shall be the former or the latter is entirely up to us.
All is not yet lost; we are still in time to defend democracy, freedom of expression, liberty, accountability and meritocracy. We must however act now and not allow ourselves to be blinded to the reality of the day.
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