Malta blogger Daphne Caruana Galizia dies in car bomb attack
Daphne
Caruana Galizia, 53, was reportedly killed when the car she was driving
exploded shortly after she left her home in Bidnija, near Mosta.
Local media say one of her sons heard the blast and rushed outside.
PM Joseph Muscat, whom Caruana Galizia accused of wrongdoing earlier this year, denounced the killing.
"I
condemn without reservations this barbaric attack on a person and on
the freedom of expression in our country," he said in a televised
statement.
"Everyone knows Ms Caruana Galizia was a harsh critic of mine, both politically and personally, as she was for others too."
But he stressed there could be "no justification... in any way" for such action.
"I will not rest before justice is done."
On Monday evening, thousands of people attended a candlelit vigil in the resort town of Sliema.
Malta
Television reported that Caruana Galizia had filed a complaint to the
police two weeks ago to say she had received threats but gave no further
information.
Police have opened a murder inquiry.
Newspaper
reports said the explosion had left debris from the rental car she was
driving strewn across the road and in a nearby field.
Caruana Galizia's death comes four months after Mr Muscat's Labour Party wonan election he called early because of the blogger's allegations linking him and his wife to the Panama Papers scandal.
The couple denied claims that they had used secret offshore bank accounts to hide payments from Azerbaijan's ruling family.
Caruana
Galizia's popular blog had also targeted opposition politicians,
calling the country's political situation "desperate" in her final post.
A
spokeswoman for the prime minister's office told the BBC that although
there were rumours the attack could be politically motivated, this would
be jumping to conclusions. But no lines of inquiry would be ruled out.
Malta has asked for international help - including the FBI in the US - to find the perpetrator, the spokeswoman said.
Meanwhile,
Caruana Galizia's family has requested that the magistrate in charge of
the investigation be replaced, the Malta Independent reports.
It said the current magistrate had on a number of occasions been the subject of criticism by Caruana Galizia.
Her scathing pen spared no punches
By Herman Grech, Times of Malta online editor
Daphne
Caruana Galizia was loved and resented in equal measure in politically
divided Malta - but she will go down in the Mediterranean island's
history as one of the most influential writers.
Her
uncompromising blog and scathing pen spared no punches, hitting out
mainly at exponents of the ruling Labour Party and their supporters, but
also sometimes criticising officials of the centre-right Nationalist
Party, including its newly-elected leader.
Starting
off as a columnist for The Sunday Times of Malta, her colourful
reportage saw her embroiled in several legal battles along the years,
including Malta's prime minister.
But
beyond all, even her fiercest critics acknowledge she was an impeccable
writer and investigative journalist. Her digital cross-investigation
into the Panama Papers, which saw the Maltese government's top officials
embroiled, effectively triggered off a premature general election last
June.
[BBC SOURCES]
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