Cassola says Caruana must be investigated for lying over Air Malta boss’s salary

Independent politician Arnold Cassola files ethics complaint to Standards Commissioner over finance minister denial to the House on Air Malta chairman salary

Finance Minister Clyde Caruana
Finance Minister Clyde Caruana

The independent candidate Arnold Cassola has called for an ethics investigation into accusations that finance minister Clyde Caruana lied when he denied to the press that Air Malta chairman David Curmi was paid a €250,000 salary.

“This kind of salary is unheard of, particularly when so many Maltese people, mainly unemployed and pensioners, are not even making ends meet by the end of the month due to the rising price of food and medicine,” Cassola said in his complaint to the Commissioner for Standards in Public Life.

Cassola said he was requesting an investigation into Caruana’s denial of the salary, and asked the Commissioner to investigate as to how “ethical” was Curmi’s salary for a state company chairman.

A Freedom of Information request by The Shift revealed that Curmi was being paid €21,500 a month for his three-year role as chairman of the national airline.

Yet Caruana did not list the salary when submitting to the House all the salaries of the appointees under his purview: instead, he stated in the document tabled in the House that there was no remuneration for Curmi.