Journalist who exposed Panama Papers link killed in car bomb

Journalist who exposed Panama Papers link killed in car bomb

A Maltese investigative journalist who had exposed her EU island nation, Malta’s links with the Panama Papers was killed when a bomb destroyed her car

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A Maltese investigative journalist who had exposed her EU island nation, Malta’s links with the Panama Papers was killed when a bomb destroyed her car near her home on Monday.

53-year-old Dphne Caruana Galizia had just driven away from her home in Mosta, a town outside the capital Valleta when the bomb exploded, sending the vehicle’s wreckage spiralling over a wall and into a field.

Prime minister, Joseph Muscat acknowledged she was “one of my harshest critics, on a political and personal level”, but denounced the “barbaric attack” as “unacceptable” violence that also assaulted freedom of expression. Opposition leader, Adrian Delia called the killing a “political murder”. The FBI in the US is to aid local police in investigating the killing.

Ms Caruana Galizia was named by Politico magazine among the 28 Europeans who are “shaping, shaking and stirring” Europe. She ran a hugely popular blog in which she relentlessly highlighted cases of alleged high-level corruption.
“There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate,” she wrote in a blog published on her site just half an hour before an explosion tore into her car.

She had alleged that Mr Muscat’s wife, Michelle, as well as his energy minister and the government’s chief-of-staff, held companies in Panama, using information in the 2016 document leak. Mr Muscat and his wife deny they held such companies.

The Panama Papers, which involved an enormous data leak from the Mossack Fonseca offshore law firm, was a project organised through the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and its partner media groups, including The Irish Times. It created shock waves around the globe and a number of political crises.

Ms Caruana Galizia had been sued for libel because of various articles she wrote on her blog, Running Commentary, and she had filed a report with police two weeks ago that she was receiving threats.

Ms Galizia’s son, Matthew, works as a data journalist with the ICIJ.