Malta-24 – News Briefing – Friday 17th July 2020

Updated 1241 – No new cases of coronavirus

The Health Department said that there were no new coronavirus cases in Malta. Another person recovered, meaning only three active cases remain at this stage.

Updated 0844 – Newspaper Review

The Times leads with the cross-examination of state witness Melvin Theuma who denied that he paid former Police Commissioner Lawrence Cutajar €30.000 to recommend his pardon.

The Independent follows the compilation of evidence against Yorgen Fenech during which Inspector Keith Arnaud revealed that the police took at least three statements from former chief of staff Keith Schembri.

In-Nazzjon reports that Yorgen Fenech’s defence is arguing in court that a missing file from the audio recordings recorded by Melvin Theuma could prove that the state witness was not telling the whole truth. The court appointed an expert to extract the data from a hard drive.

L-Orizzont quotes Justice Minister Edward Zammit Lewis who warned the opposition that if it voted against a series of bills, it would be voting directly against the recommendations of the Venice Commission on which the proposed amendments are based.

The Times says that the Preti masterpiece Boethius and Philosophy has arrived in Malta after the government bought it at an auction. The oil on canvas painting had mysteriously disappeared from the Grandmaster’s Palace more than two centuries ago.

L-Orizzont says that EU leaders are today meeting for the first in-person summit since the Covid-19 outbreak. The two items on the agenda are the economic recovery plan and the Multi-annual Financial Framework.

The Independent quotes PN MPs who dismissed party leader Adrian Delia’s argument that the new statute imposes a two-year time bar between one vote of confidence and another. They argue that the rules will apply from the next such vote.

In-Nazzjon says that PN Leader Adrian Delia took part in a virtual summit of the European People’s Party. He said that Malta should aim for the maximum financial aid from the coronavirus recovery fund.

Morning Briefing

A convulted day at the Law Courts dominated the news streams on Thursday, with the continuation of the compilation of evidence against Yorgen Fenech, the alleged mastermind in the assassination of Daphne Caruana Galizia.

Fenech’s defence team asked Melvin Theuma, the self-confessed middleman, whether former police commissioner Lawrence Cutajar had been paid a €30,000 sum by Edwin ‘il-Ġojja’ Brincat – who is described as a source for Cutajar in the criminal world. Theuma vehemently denied this claim, with media sources present in the court room saying that he laughed it off.

In a separate development, investigator Keith Arnaud confirmed that former chief of staff Keith Schembri would be present for meetings with the prime minister on the investigation. “We never felt the need to hide anything from him”.  The commissioner would also be present for these meetings. Arnaud said that he met  former Prime Minister Joseph Muscat and Schembri about the case in November 2017, then once a week before the arrests of that same year, and then in April and May 2018.

PN developments

There were little developments from Tal-Pietà throughout yesterday as both sides studied their next move. However, national broadcaster TVM reported that yet another executive council meeting will take place next Thursday. Sources quoted by TVM referred to a three-point agenda, which include the points “concrete action” and “political situation”.

Coronavirus in Malta

The country registered the seventh consecutive day without any new cases. No recoveries took place, meaning that four active cases remain. Meanwhile, Prof Charmaine Gauci, Health Superintendent, told The Malta Independent that from current studies and findings, antibodies developed in patients who recovered from COVID-19 do not last long, but the reinfection rate is very low,.

“From our findings, we are seeing that antibodies in patients who recovered from COVID-19 do not last long, but when you look at the rates on an international level, we are noticing that the re-infection rate is low; meaning that re-infection is not very common.”

CDE News

 

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