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AFM’s newest entries perform official recruitment parade

AFM’s newest entries perform official recruitment parade
May 25 2022 Share

After lots of training and hard work, the Armed Forces of Malta welcomed 67 new recruits at the end of 2021. With 4 of them women and 4 Gozitans, the recruits finally got to showcase their choreographed and rhythmic parade as they join Malta’s army. 

The recruits had to undergo testing in fields ranging from military to medical knowledge, from academic to field work. The build-up culminated in their official parade which took place yesterday, Wednesday 25th may 2022. 

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A subsequent ceremony swore in the recruits, with the official AFM Facebook page sharing some images of the event. 

Home Affairs Minister Byron Camilleri welcomed the new recruits with a Facebook post of his own. ‘As a government, we will be shoulder to shoulder alongside the recruits in their journey with the AFM. There is no greater honour than serving one’s country!’ 

Well done to all!

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Install wide CCTV coverage in St Paul’s Bay says PN MP

Install wide CCTV coverage in St Paul’s Bay says PN MP
May 25 2022 Share

PN MP Ivan Castillo has called for locality wide CCTV coverage for all of St Paul’s Bay following vandalism and other incidents. 

Posting to Facebook, Castillo said that the situation in St Paul’s Bay, Bugibba, Qawra and Xemxija has residents concerned and distressed. 

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This locality as a whole has the highest registered amount of Vandalism and the highest amount of thefts, with a police force that is under staffed and over worked! Police have to cater for a huge area after a number of police stations have been closed.”

‘If all this does not make St Pauls Bay a candidate for Locality wide CCTV I do not know what does. It should be made  a pilot project for the rest of the island!  We should be taking what is now the worst locality in the country when it comes to crime rates and give the residents  some solace and hope!’

He said that we find money for everything and we should therefore invest seriously in making lives better rather than just talking about it in parliament. 

‘Let’s try and start to prevent crimes rather than be be reactive to them with the police force extended beyond their limit’ concluded the MP. 

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Here is what a Maltese doctor had to say about monkeypox

Here is what a Maltese doctor had to say about monkeypox
May 25 2022 Share

Doctor Malcolm Paul Agius Galea took to Facebook to address some concerns being raised by the reports of the spreading of monkeypox. ‘Monkeypox is a sickness caused by a virus which comes from the same family of viruses as small pox (which was eradicated with a vaccine)’ he said. 

He explained how we’ve known about this virus for around 50 years and it is called monkeypox because the first time it was noted was in a group of monkeys being used in research. ‘However, it has nothing to do with monkeys!’ 

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‘It is a sickness which impacts everyone and one could be infected with it for around 14 days before symptoms start to appear. During these first 14 days, an infected person would not be able to spread it around.’ Some of the symptoms include fatigue, fever, inflamed lymph nodes and a subsequent rash. It is at this stage that the virus becomes infective and treatment is more aimed at the lessening of symptoms rather than cure. 

After the rash dries up, the person remains able to spread it until the last bits of the rash fall off. It is transmitted through direct contact with the infected person or indirect contact with liquids coming from the person (towels or bedsheets). The symptoms of monkeypox resemble chickenpox but vary in the fact that monkeypox results in the inflammation of the lymph nodes. It usually takes up to two to three weeks for the infection to pass and no long term effects on the body have been reported. 

‘Even though it is important to stay informed about the virus, it is also crucial that one is informed well about the virus and that no excess alarm is caused’. 

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€1 million in fines from drivers using their phone in 2021

€1 million in fines from drivers using their phone in 2021
May 25 2022 Share

Up to a whopping €1 million were paid in fines for by people using a mobile phone whilst driving last year in Malta, revealed Home Affairs Minister Byron Camilleri.

The Minister was providing information as an answer to a parliamentary question tabled by Nationalist MP Ivan Bartolo. Camilleri said that €971,781.52 were paid for 9,599 phone contraventions. 

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The fines had increased back in 2016, increasing from €23.29 to €100 and carried a penalty of between three to six points. That year, 11,145 fines had been issued, but LESA officers said that higher fines did not deter drivers from using their phones. 

In the first three months of 2022, 9 people died due to traffic accidents – an unfortunate phenomenon which has become all too common on Maltese roads. Despite warnings and the use of speed guns, road accidents only seem to be on the increase. 

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