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Government working on budget without increase in taxes – PM Robert Abela

Government working on budget without increase in taxes - PM Robert Abela
Aug 8 2021 Share

In a segment on the Labour Party’s ONE Radio, Prime Minister Robert Abela revealed that the government is working on a budget which will not include an increase in taxes.

Abela held that while other European governments are increasing taxes on energy and fuel and raising VAT, Malta’s government is working to assure that no taxes are increased going forward.

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The Prime Minister also addressed credit rating agency Moody’s A2 score on Malta, stating that such rating “shows us the country has good leadership and that it is taking the right decisions, but it also shows us where we have to improve”, going on to allude to the Opposition’s only consistency in “finding nothing good for the country”.

The PM also highlighted the stabilisation of hospitalised COVID-19 cases and if the situation remains stable, more restrictions will be lifted.

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Almost 350,000 people travelled to Gozo in 2020

Aug 8 2021 Share

Close to 350,000 thousand individuals crossed over to Gozo & Comino from Malta in 2020, registering a substantial increase than the previous two years.

In 2019, slightly less than 215,000 people crossed over whilst 2018 saw 230,000 crossing over, as revealed by the National Statistics Office (NSO).

The NSO also published that in 2020, almost 287,500 travelled for recreation, 54,600 people crossed over from Malta to visit family or friends and almost 18,400 residents went to Gozo for commercial, academic or health reasons.

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Fast fashion is not the future | Għajjejt u Xbajt

Aug 8 2021 Share

After working with Fashion Revolution Malta as a student representative for the past few years, I can never experience a fast fashion outlet in the same way I once did. I still see clothes as a playground for self-expression, each garment a slide into a new identity, or deeper into an existing one. But whereas stepping into one of these shops used to feel like creativity, excitement and potential, it’s now just a giant physical symbol of the ‘fast fashion’ system — a business model popularised in the 90s where garment workers, often children and women of colour, are paid as little as possible, to rapidly produce as much clothing as possible.

Whereas the clean white walls used to feel bright and inviting, they now feel like a whitewashing of crowded sweatshops where safety hazards such as factory fires or collapses abound and women are extremely vulnerable to sexual violence. 

Where I saw endless potential in new collections every week, design after design on the shop floor, (there’s always another level if you didn’t find anything you liked on the previous one) I now see the sheer amount of overproduction and waste generated. High quotas of garments to fulfil per hour for less than a living wage means that workers are exhausted yet trapped in the cycle of poverty, and the reality of union- busting is that they are stripped of the fundamental right to negotiate their conditions.

This is the system which allows for global fashion brands to pollute our ecosystems with 100 billion new items of clothing per year. Not only is production extremely resource-intensive, but the reality of cheap, poor-quality clothing is that it normalises a throwaway culture. One where overconsuming clothes is an affordable thing to do for fun for people in the global North, and dealing with our clothing waste is a burden people don’t have the privilege to ignore in the global South. The OR foundation, a charity working to catalyse a justice-led circular economy highlights this reality in Ghana, where our clothing waste currently sits on Accra’s beaches and burns in open dumpsites where cattle graze and children play.

Though I came to the movement after watching the documentary ‘The True Cost’ in 2018, it wasn’t until the pandemic hit that I truly began to understand fast fashion as a deeply complex, systemic issue. When lockdowns became a reality and global fashion brands cancelled orders on a mass scale, they refused to pay garment workers $40 billion worth of wages for work which had already been completed. Tahmina Azad, a machine operator in Dhaka, Bangladesh explained in an article for the Guardian how after having nothing to cook for her children for two straight days, she contemplated killing herself and her children, ‘setting them free from this torture’.

When you learn that garment workers are racking up debt in order to fend off starvation during the pandemic, while fashion CEOs hoard billions of dollars in profits, you realise there is something seriously wrong with the current system. It doesn’t get clearer than that. This system may be normalised but it is far from normal. The irony is that sustainability in fashion is now being marketed as a ‘new’ phenomenon defined by recycling technologies, but true sustainability — slower fashion cycles, repairing your clothes and investing in quality clothing was the norm long before fast fashion ever existed. It is a fairly new model which emerged as we know it today in the early 90s and the sad reality is that there is an entire generation of teenagers and young adults who see rapid trend cycles and valuing clothing as disposable as the norm.

This is in no way intended to shame people for consuming fast fashion, but rather to highlight the reality of the system, which continues to paint over exploitation within supply chains with opaque, greenwashing brushstrokes. Fast fashion is not upheld by low-income consumers who buy clothes out of necessity or people who don’t have access to any alternatives.

If you’re interested in the movement but not sure where to start, check out the work of global fashion activism movements such as Fashion Revolution, Remake and The OR foundation, get involved locally with Fashion Revolution Malta, and practice conscious consumption. Retrain yourself to see the value in your clothes, rewear, repair and practice borrowing or swapping with friends or family if this is available to you. Reframing purchases as a long-term commitment can also help encourage you to buy less and take care of what you do buy!

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A Bohemian Rhapsody sequel is actually in the works; Brian May confirms

Aug 8 2021 Share

After the worldwide success of box office hit and cinematic phenomenon Bohemian Rhapsody, a sequel to the Queen film Bohemian Rhapsody is in the works, as confirmed by Queen’s very own Brian May.

The 2018 movie starring Rami Malek raked in over $904 million globally and even secured Oscars for Best Actor, Best Editing and Best Sound Editing/Mixing.

74-year-old Brian May revealed that they are exploring potential ideas for a follow-up, stating that while it will have to be a great script and take time to figure out, the film’s success was something they could have never predicted.

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