Those of us in the Labour Party back then were all wrong to support the government as it conceived these frauds, so we are all morally guilty in many ways. I hold no moral superiority over my friends, who throughout this saga have acted very decently.
Previous Permanent Secretary Alfred Camilleri will be indicted in court for misappropriation of funds and facilitating money-laundering like previous Health Minister Chris Fearne. Both of them have made no statement attacking the Inquiring Magistrate and haven’t displayed any infantile drama, contrary to other more seemingly guilty parties. Both of them share the experience of being duped by colleagues they trusted and assumed had goodwill, such as former Minister for Finance Edward Scicluna, who has recently revealed his true character.
Edward Scicluna was supposed to have been the person to raise the red flags over this project in the cabinet. His colleagues who were less financially literate than him trusted his technocratic pose and aura, yet it turned out that he was just full of shit who got his friends into a lot of trouble just because he was too afraid to speak out.
He never disclosed this publicly, but eventually, Alfred Camilleri had to retire against the government’s wishes due to health reasons. He ended up mentally stressed for what he got involved into, and at one point in time his health collapsed. Good men aren’t made for bad things.
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