Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat has said he will resign in January following pressure from citizens for the truth about the 2017 car bombing that killed a journalist.
In a televised message, Muscat (pictured) said he has informed Malta‘s president that he will quit as leader of the governing Labour Party on 12 January.
He said: “…in the days after I will resign as prime minister”.
Hours earlier, thousands of people had protested outside a courthouse in the capital, Valletta, demanding he step down.
“As prime minister, I promised two years ago that justice would be done in the case of the murder of Daphne Caruana Galizia,” Muscat said, beginning his speech, adding: “Today I am here to tell you that I kept my word.”
Muscat noted that in addition to three people arrested soon after the bombing for carrying out the actual attack, now there is “someone accused of being the principal person behind this killing”.
He was referring to prominent Maltese businessman Yorgen Fenech, who appeared in Valletta’s courthouse on Saturday on charges of complicity in the murder and of allegedly organising and financing the bombing. He entered pleas of innocence.
Muscat’s former chief of staff Keith Schembri has also been linked to the killing.
He was among Government members targeted by Caruana Galizia’s investigative reporting.
Schembri, who resigned last week, was arrested in the probe but later released. He denies wrongdoing.
Labour has a comfortable majority in the Maltese Parliament, indicating a new party leader could become premier without the need for a national election.
Picture: Reuters/Vincent Kessler
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