
Sunday, 30th March 2008 - 11:56CET
MLP, GWU mark Freedom Day
The acting leader of the Labour Party, Charles Mangion, has appealed to the government to consult the opposition on matters of national interest, notably foreign affairs.
Speaking at Vittoriosa, where the MLP marked Freedom Day, Dr Mangion criticized the government for having reactivated Malta's membership of Partnership for Peace without prior consultation.
He underlined the importance of Freedom Day, which recalls the closure of the British military base on March 31, 1979. Dr Mangion said that the departure of foreign military forces meant Malta was completely free for the first time in its history, a development which had been beneficial for social-economic growth.
Dr Mangion led an MLP delegation in wreath laying on the freedom monument. The delegation included deputy leader Michael Falzon and general secretary Jason Micallef.
Flowers were earlier also laid by a GWU delegation headed by general secretary Tony Zarb.
Official celebrations will be held tomorrow morning when the AFM band and a guard of honour will march to the monument. Flowers will be laid by President Eddie Fenech Adami and Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi.







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Comments
You Praise this Stateman today in your comments , yet you were lead to believe he is Malta's trator.
Dom. Mintoff is still alive and if you really respect this person, who is Maltese just like you are, you should do your best to see that within the Party which he created after all , he will still be considered as one of the best leaders of one of the biggest movements in our country.
The Maltese and MLP needed him and he gave his share , now it is time for his supporters to return their share before it is too late.
I hope the new leadership in MLP will recognise this.
If there is a day when the MLP and the PN could be on the same page and celebrate together, it is certainly Freedom Day.
Freedom Day could not have happened if Independence Day had not occurred before.
But Freedon Day should not be underestimated. We shall never know if Malta's Financial and Military agreements would have been renewed in 1974, if the NP had won the 1971 elections.
But the fact is that the British military base in Malta was closed down for good in 1979. Not an insignificant achievement.
We only need to look at the island of Cyprus to realize the contributions of Dr. George Borg Olivier and Mr. Dom Mintoff on our country's developments.
48 years after their independence, the Cypriots are still lumped with the British sovereign military bases which did nothing to prevent the coup by the Greek junta and the invasion by Turkey in 1974.
Fortunately, we had the right political leaders at the appropriate times that led our country to real sovereignty without bloodshed.
However i still recall the independence events of 1964 when i was dragged together with the rest of my school to a huge British military parade ground. I recall how - even as schoolchildren - we could never understand why the 'independent" Maltese government had to be seek the British Forces' permission to use their grounds for the celebrations!
The interlying period between 1964 and 1979 was eloquent enough with events to make us all understand fully the difference between a celebrative function and a historic reality. I recall how history is made of facts in which statesmen are involved. I recall the enormous support and admiration Mr Mintoff earned from Italy's Aldo Moro, Germany's Willy Brandt, Austria's Bruno Kreisky and so many international leaders, including Lord Carrington himself in later years!
We lived those years when the "queen of Malta" paid a state-visit to Malta in 1967. (No, there wasn't yet anything like "queen of Gozo" - haha).
We still remember the times when communications, air transport, banking and broadcasting were still in the hands of those who granted the independence documents to Dr Borg Olivier who had to be later ousted most uncerimoniously (to be charitable) by his own party leaders.
We lived the years when the qp71 Labour government obliged the British colonial government to hand on sufficient millions each year to help Malta grow out of needing their forces on what was only a military base!
Mr Ch Camilleri reminds me of the many attempts, particularly since 1987, to re-write history by self-declared historians through partisan productions for party channels.
History, the real one, the one our people lived, is made up of stark facts. Definitely not emotions or, worse still, twisting facts!
LONG LIVE FREE MALTA, for as long it can be allowed to stay free!
including renegotiating the time when the british forces leave our island.