Founder and co-owner of MaltaToday, Saviour Balzan has reported on Maltese politics and...
San Gimignano, political parties and Manoel Island
Towers or mini-skyscrapers are once again in fashion
14 striking towers symbolise the magnificent Tuscan town of San Gimignano. Fourteen towers with varying heights that marked the rivalry of fourteen well-to-do Italian families who shared the precise egotistic dream of having a higher tower than their fellow neighbours’.
Then, some 700 years ago, I guess there were no newspapers or environmental activists or Marlene Farrugias to lament over the rape of the Tuscan landscape; not a single soul to protest against the loss of pine forests that disappeared from the Tuscan hills to decorate the small and large palaces and homes; no one at all to be concerned about the sprouting quarries that provided the stone and granite and marble; no planning authority to decide on policy and no unions to defend the plight of workers forced to build the towers at miserly wages and dreadful conditions.
Then too there was what we would call an environmental and aesthetic catastrophe. 650 or 700 years later, San Gimignano is not an aesthetic nightmare, quite the contrary, it is in fact more than a pretty place, it is simply impressive. I guess age gas transformed something that was obnoxious into something beautiful.
Fast forward to 2016 to St George’s and St Julian’s Bay and we can see that there could be up to seven towers, two for the Corinthia six-star hotel, two for the Seabank project, one for Villa Rosa and one for Joe Portelli at Mercury House.
Until now the only representative Maltese skyscraper is at Portomaso.
Towers or mini-skyscrapers are once again in fashion. It not only offers investors the great possibility of a good return from a small footprint, it also provides them with something to brag about.
Before the advent of the towers in Malta, most of Malta’s top brass would have been flaunting their superyachts. “How big is it? How much did you buy it for?” would be one way of showing how affluent and successful they are. The superyachts and the luxury cars remain a reference point but the real barometer for success will now be the towers, monuments of ascendancy.
The sad thing is that this trend was not developed in this century. It dates back to the early days of mankind. 500 years from now, I get the feeling that the towers if built will be historical monuments, beautiful symbols worth preserving. I cannot imagine which organisation will be charging around claiming that we should destroy our historical heritage of towers.
***
Partit Demokratiku (PD) or DP, the new political party headed by Marlene Farrugia, will try its best to break the electoral hurdle and get a seat in parliament. But the obstacles are high.
History could serve as a lesson. What is interesting is that some former Alternattiva Demokratika activists and supporters are now in PD. But there are no real heavyweights except for Farrugia. And from the surveys it is clear that the largest segment of voters will come from the PN.
That is not good news for either the PN or PD. Very much as was the case with Alternattiva Demokratika in 1989, who at the time had some heavyweights including Toni Abela and Wenzu Mintoff, Labour’s President and party whip respectively. But there were other heavyweights such as Joe (Peppi) Azzopardi, Arnold Cassola, Harry Vassallo and others.
The party had been preceded by a newspaper Alternattiva, published fortnightly and later a radio station. I know all this since I was there as the coordinator and co-founder, and singularly as funder and bank guarantor, and I can never forgot how the PN in government and the PL in opposition ganged up together to make it impossible for us to get to places.
To make matters worse, TVM, The Times and The Independent, One TV and Net TV made us look like simpletons.
That was 24 years ago, and there were several political issues to tackle: divorce, party financing, local councils, political broadcasting, electoral reform, accountability and of course gay rights.
The so-called Democratic Party is kicking off with more or less the same weather conditions. The snag is that with the present electoral system the PD has no chance in hell of getting off the ground. After nine years in AD, I realised this and left.
And yes, Marlene is right, the big two will denigrate her, most especially the PN-friendly press. But it is to be expected. As was the case with the Greens, most of the electoral fall-out affected the PN. Few Labour voters steered towards AD.
***
Manoel Island is effectively run by the Midi Group where one finds significant shareholding of MSV and BOV apart from Gasan and the Alf Mizzi and Sons group.
What the bank is doing in this shareholding beats me. BOV chairman John Cassar White can explain, as well as MSV. The real big question goes to the Alf Mizzi and Sons group, which has seemingly slept on the project, apart from the fact that it is trying to sell Manoel Island to other interested parties for a song.
The fact that they have done nothing in Manoel Island is fine, considering the way they converted Tigné Point in a ghetto of tall buildings surrounding a paved square reminiscent of some Moscow suburb. It was a wonderful exercise in architectural madness, and a sick joke for the Valletta peninsula.
The point about Manoel Island is that the company entrusted to develop this site had commitments and it seems to have no upheld them fully. Manoel Island should not be raped but gracefully developed with open spaces that can serve as a lung for the urbanites who live in their thousands in the surrounding localities.
The government is duty-bound to look at the contract and act now. It is unacceptable that years later the Midi consortium choose to do nothing because they are either short of funds, ideas or better still a vision.
It’s not extreme for a government to see that contractual obligations are fulfilled. The alternative is doing nothing and doing nothing is never a good idea.
-
National
Fearne, Cutajar return to Cabinet an ‘abandonment’ of accountability, Repubblika says
-
National
Who’s who in the new Cabinet
-
National
Over 50 pigeons found dead in loft during animal cruelty inspection
More in News-
Business News
Navigating the new era of FinTech: MFSA launches high-level masterclasses on AI, crypto, and MiCA compliance
-
Business News
Alkagesta participates in IATA Aviation Energy Forum amid SAF market transition
-
Business News
Economic sentiment moderates towards long-term average in April
More in Business-
Sportsbetting
What new Irish betting regulation could mean for Maltese bookmakers
-
Sportsbetting
Neptunes crowned BOV U18 champions after decisive win over Sliema
-
Football
Futsal Malta 2025/26: Young challengers face Luxol in Laferla Men’s Trophy final
More in Sports-
Books
The 2026 Doreen Micallef National Poetry Contest is now open for entries
-
Books
New Queen Elizabeth II biography launched at the Phoenicia Malta
-
Art
Malta Biennale 2026 comes to a close
More in Arts-
Opinions
We choose to build Momentum. Not because it is easy, but because it is hard
-
Editorial
Labour must now show it is deserving of the electorate’s renewed trust
-
Opinions
Robert Abela can make some courageous reforms, he has nothing to lose
More in Comment-
Articles
Richard England launches new book Katabasis: A Stygian Odyssey
-
Recipes
Steak, onion and mushroom pie
-
Recipes
Lemon and herb swordfish with tomatoes and mushrooms
More in Magazines