The police have called in the 21-year-old editor of a student newspaper for questioning, after his publication was banned from the University because one of the articles was deemed obscene.

Meanwhile, it has emerged that it was the University Chaplain who first flagged the article to the University authorities for action to be taken.

"I read it and I thought it was really obscene stuff. But I didn't get involved much. I passed it on to the University to take a decision. It wasn't my decision to take, it's not my area," Chaplain Michael Bugeja said.

The article, a short story by Alex Vella Gera, 36, caused a ruckus because of its vulgar colloquial language, pornographic descriptions and degrading portrayal of women. The story, Li Tkisser Sewwi (fix what you break) was published in Ir-Realtà, a small non-profit left-wing monthly newspaper published by students.

"I think we can come up with stuff that is more appropriate for a University setting. This is not a language one should use in articles or newspapers. The law itself does not permit such vulgarity," Fr Bugeja said.

He said he was "completely put off" after reading the first few lines of the story and immediately felt it was vulgar and degrading. He added the Chaplaincy welcomed debates on campus but felt such language did not need to be used to spark it.

Meanwhile, the University did not reply to questions about how many complaints it received and whether the administration felt criminal action should be taken against the student publishers.

In a press statement the University had said it deemed the content of the article to be discriminatory to women and to have broken the law since it was illegal to distribute obscene material.

It added that no permission was requested to distribute the newspaper, although other publications and objects were never stopped from being distributed because they had no permission.

The newspaper copies, which are distributed freely on Campus, were removed and thrown away by University cleaners in the past couple of weeks.

Mr Vella Gera, who lives in Brussels, has published two novels that do not employ the same style used in the short story, namely Żewġ and Lil-Hinn Minn Jien.

Editor and history student Mark Camilleri said he was not informed about the case by Rector Juanito Camilleri but by University Students' Council (KSU) president Carl Grech who said the police had turned up at the University to speak to him.

Mr Camilleri felt that although the law did state it was illegal to distribute obscenities the article used poetic licence to reflect a brutish mentality of many Maltese men who believed women were objects. The article had a clear message against such a mentality, he said.

"In fact, the language such people use is much worse than that in the article. You hear them all the time, even how they speak to their children," he said.

"We don't agree with it. We just wanted to reflect this ugly reality that we all know exists. You might not like it, but you cannot negate it."

He said that in the law there was no definition of the word obscenity, and such laws were created ages ago and never really enforced.

He feels that if this article could be banned, several books in the library should also be banned for using a similar style, namely Henry Miller, Marquis de Sade and Maltese acclaimed author Ġuże Stagno.

He believes there is an ulterior motive behind the ban since his organisation had often been seen as a nuisance for its political agenda.

Mr Camilleri also complained about the lack of support from KSU, saying it was clear they also had a right-wing agenda.

When contacted, the KSU president said he would not be commenting on the issue while the police were investigating. He admitted he had not yet read the article.

Ir-Realtà is still preparing for its forthcoming edition which Mr Camilleri promised would make "no compromises".

More news stories in the News section.

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