The Malta Independent 25 April 2024, Thursday
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Government riding roughshod over civil society - Front Harsien ODZ

Tuesday, 7 July 2015, 09:46 Last update: about 10 years ago
Front Harsien ODZ today condemned the absolutist way through which the government is pushing through three new laws regulating planning and environmental protection without adequate consultation as required by the Aarhus convention of which Malta is a signatory.
 

In a statement, Front Harsien ODZ said it considers the 24 hour notice given to NGOs to confirm their participation in a two hour discussion on the three laws as an insult to civil society.

“The Environment Bill is 76 pages long with 86 clauses, the new Planning Bill is 98 pages long with 105 clauses and the bill on the new environment and planning tribunal is 50 pages long with 55 clauses. It is impossible to expect civil society to be in a position of reading through these documents in a couple of days.”

Front Harsien ODZ insists that the way the government is rushing through its agenda without real and effective consultation is in breach of the Aarhus Convention which guarantees the right to participate in environmental decision-making. 

The Front calls on government to postpone discussion on all three laws to after the Summer recess and to initiate a proper consultation process on the proposed laws which contain a number of controversial proposals which merit a full public consultation exercise which should take over a period of months not a couple hours.  

Front Harsien ODZ will be participating in today’s meeting of parliament’s committee for planning and the environment to voice its concern on the absolutist way government is weakening the country’s environmental legislation by introducing lax laws by stealth to the detriment of the common good.

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