That bitter sod, Matthew Vella, does a Nakita – but obviously, he can’t be sacked
Malta Today, this morning:
Belgium close to governing coalition after 18-month gap
A year-and-a-half after parliamentary elections in Belgium, a new government appears on the verge of being formed, reports say.
Six parties have agreed on a new administration headed by a French-speaking Socialist, Elio Di Rupo.
Talks were hampered by differences between the country’s French and Dutch-speaking communities.
But correspondents say the risk posed by the Eurozone debt crisis has focused the minds of political leaders.
A caretaker administration has been in charge since the last government resigned in April 2010 after failing to resolve long-running linguistic disputes.
The separate Dutch- and French-speaking wings of the Socialists, Christian Democrats and Liberals completed the last major hurdle, an austerity budget, on Saturday.
The parties are expected to give final approval to a 180-page agreement on Thursday and a new government could be in place early next week, following party meetings over the weekend, sources close to the talks are quoted as saying.
Belgium, which held elections in June last year, has set a modern-day world record for being without a formal government.
Di Rupo, 60, would be Belgium’s first French-speaking prime minister in three decades. He would also be the first Socialist to take the premiership in Belgium since 1974.
Belgium’s borrowing costs soared last week and ratings agency Standard and Poor’s cut its credit score.
The downgrade focused politicians’ minds on agreeing an austerity budget that aims to balance the books by 2015, removing the last major obstacle for a government deal.
Talks between the six parties, three from the Dutch-speaking north and three from the French-speaking south, had previously been bogged down over how far to reduce social welfare spending and tax the rich.
Absent from the talks and the coalition, however, is Belgium’s biggest party, the separatist Flemish N-VA led by Bart De Wever.
Belgium’s political deadlock had raised fears the country was heading for a split, separating wealthier Dutch-speaking Flanders, which has 60% of the population, from the French-speaking south.
There was a breakthrough in talks in October over devolving more power to the regions.
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The BBC (online) at 5am today:
Belgium close to governing coalition after 18-month gap
A year-and-a-half after parliamentary elections in Belgium, a new government appears on the verge of being formed, reports say.
Six parties have agreed on a new administration headed by a French-speaking Socialist, Elio Di Rupo.
Talks were hampered by differences between the country’s French and Dutch-speaking communities.
But correspondents say the risk posed by the Eurozone debt crisis has focused the minds of political leaders.
A caretaker administration has been in charge since the last government resigned in April 2010 after failing to resolve long-running linguistic disputes.
The separate Dutch- and French-speaking wings of the Socialists, Christian Democrats and Liberals completed the last major hurdle, an austerity budget, on Saturday.
The parties are expected to give final approval to a 180-page agreement on Thursday and a new government could be in place early next week, following party meetings over the weekend, sources close to the talks are quoted as saying.
Belgium, which held elections in June last year, has set a modern-day world record for being without a formal government.
Mr Di Rupo, 60, would be Belgium’s first French-speaking prime minister in three decades. He would also be the first Socialist to take the premiership in Belgium since 1974.
Belgium’s borrowing costs soared last week and ratings agency Standard and Poor’s cut its credit score.
The downgrade focused politicians’ minds on agreeing an austerity budget that aims to balance the books by 2015, removing the last major obstacle for a government deal.
Talks between the six parties, three from the Dutch-speaking north and three from the French-speaking south, had previously been bogged down over how far to reduce social welfare spending and tax the rich.
Absent from the talks and the coalition, however, is Belgium’s biggest party, the separatist Flemish N-VA led by Bart De Wever.
Belgium’s political deadlock had raised fears the country was heading for a split, separating wealthier Dutch-speaking Flanders, which has 60% of the population, from the French-speaking south.
There was a breakthrough in talks in October over devolving more power to the regions.
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He went a few steps more than Nakita. She paraphrased some of Gillian Tett’s sentences. But Matthew Vella copied and pasted without mercy.
Are they dumb enough not to realise how such behaviour alienates the well-educated, well-mannered and questioning sector of society? The floating voter!
Ma kemm hu bravu dan Matthew. It’s not like Maltese people don’t read the BBC on line. FFS.
As his T shirt says, sigh.
It could be Vella wrote both reports himself.
I spotted this and commented in a different blog article this morning…I have since informed the BBC of Maltatoday’s lack of professionalism (not that I expect anything to happen of course). However I’ve done my part…
@ ”Matthew Vella, doing the total tosser thing of pretending he was on the Libyan front… ”
A stablemate of his also claimed to have been in Libya at the height of the crisis.
It is more then ample proof of the low opinion Matthew Vella and Salvu Balzan have of their readers’s intelligence . They assume that people are too dumb to notice.
my oh my. Kelma b’kelma. He could at least have had the decency to paraphrase it.
He would need to understand the article in order to paraphrase it. I think that is somewhat beyond his abilities.
Harder to paraphrase, easier to plagiarize.
A friend of mine on Facebook spotted another plagiarised news item which is equally blatant. Compare the two articles below:
http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/newsdetails/news/world/Iran-set-to-dominate-EU-foreign-ministers-talks
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15978420
“Iran will be watching closely, our correspondent says.”
Oh, Malta Today even have an Iran correspondent!
Bill Gates must make that copy+paste function a bit more intelligent.