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Hitmen took €150,000 to murder journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, Malta court hears

Protesters hold photos of Daphne Caruana Galizia during a protest in Valletta, 29 November, 2019
Protesters hold photos of Daphne Caruana Galizia during a protest in Valletta, 29 November, 2019 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Gavin Blackburn
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Caruana Galizia had exposed corruption at the highest level in the country, shining a spotlight on murky links between Malta's business and political elites.

A handshake, €150,000 in cash and a coded text: Maltese prosecutors on Thursday set out their case against a tycoon accused of ordering the murder of a prominent investigative journalist.

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Yorgen Fenech is accused of masterminding the 2017 killing of Daphne Caruana Galizia in a case that shook the island nation and brought down a previous government.

After the defendant attempted to escape on his yacht in 2019 and many procedural delays, Fenech's trial finally began on Wednesday.

He denies the charges.

According to the indictment, cited by the Times of Malta, the 44-year-old tasked an acquaintance with finding people capable of getting rid of the journalist and blogger, initially saying he feared she would publish revelations about his uncle.

This acquaintance contacted two brothers, Alfred and George Degiorgio, agreeing with them on a price of €150,000 which he says he was given by Fenech in cash in a brown envelope, according to an account by Amphora Media, the journalism platform of the Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation.

Maltese businessman Yorgen Fenech leaves court in Valletta, 29 November, 2019
Maltese businessman Yorgen Fenech leaves court in Valletta, 29 November, 2019 Martin Agius/AP

The two brothers, each sentenced in 2022 to 40 years in prison, spent the summer of 2017 planning the journalist's assassination, aided by an accomplice.

According to this accomplice, who was sentenced in 2021 to 15 years’ imprisonment, the trio initially intended to shoot the journalist at her home with sniper rifles, before ultimately opting for a car bomb.

The 53-year-old Caruana Galizia, married and the mother of three sons, was killed on 16 October 2017 near her home.

The killers used a coded text message to detonate the explosive device hidden the previous night under the driver’s seat of her Peugeot 108.

Yorgen Fenech, who in 2013 won a multimillion-euro contract with the Maltese state for the construction of a gas-fired power plant, was arrested in 2019 aboard his yacht as he tried to leave Malta.

A drawing of Daphne Caruana Galizia and a banner reading 'Justice' during a silent gathering at the place where she was killed in Bidnija fields, 16 October, 2022
A drawing of Daphne Caruana Galizia and a banner reading 'Justice' during a silent gathering at the place where she was killed in Bidnija fields, 16 October, 2022 AP Photo

Caruana Galizia had exposed corruption at the highest level in the country, shining a spotlight on murky links between Malta's business and political elites.

The death of the popular journalist and blogger described as a "one-woman WikiLeaks" sparked outrage around the world and put Malta, the European Union's smallest member state, in the spotlight over its apparent rule-of-law failings.

Her killing also led to the resignation of then-premier Joseph Muscat in January 2020 after widespread anger and mass protests over his perceived efforts to protect friends and allies from the investigation.

The trial is expected to last several weeks.

Additional sources • AFP

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