Cardboard box? What cardboard box? John Dalli wasn’t even allowed back into the building to clear his desk.

Published: October 21, 2012 at 1:58pm

A report in The Sunday Times, today:

Dalli immediately barred from entering Commission offices
By Ivan Camilleri in Brussels

John Dalli was immediately barred from entering the European Commission headquarters in Brussels in the wake of the snus tobacco scandal that led to his resignation last Tuesday.

He was also not allowed to use any of its services as soon as Commission President Jose Manoel Barroso’s office gave him the news.

“Mr Dalli was not allowed to enter into his office of the Berlaymont building as he was not a member of the Commission any longer. These are the rules, which are followed strictly,” the former Commissioner’s spokesman told The Sunday Times.

Mr Dalli was forced to resign by Mr Barroso after the EU’s anti-fraud office concluded he was aware that his former canvasser had requested a large sum of money to use his contacts with the former Commissioner to change the EU’s tobacco rules. Mr Dalli denies these accusations.

According to Mr Dalli, although he had asked Mr Barroso to give him 24 hours to consult his lawyers and family on whether he should resign, the Commission President gave him just 45 minutes to hand in his resignation or be sacked.

Commission sources said the fast decision and dynamics of the Commission bureaucracy took Mr Dalli by surprise – so much so that although he wanted to make a statement to the media after his meeting with Mr Barroso, he was denied access to the Commission’s press service.

“Mr Dalli wanted us to issue a press release contradicting the position taken by Mr Barroso.

“We obviously couldn’t attend to Mr Dalli’s request and we had to explain to him that he was no longer a Commission official,” sources close to the press service said.

Instead, Mr Dalli used the services of a Brussels-based newspaper – New Europe – to issue his statement.

An e-mail sent to Brussels-based journalists late at night by Alexandros Koronakis, director of New Europe, contained Mr Dalli’s words.

Entitled ‘Foreword on behalf of Commissioner Dalli’, Mr Koronakis wrote: “On behalf of the Office of Commissioner John Dalli, we forward you the press statement which he was unable to disseminate through the European Commission as they did not have the technical capacity to disseminate it at that moment.”




10 Comments Comment

  1. H.P. Baxxter says:

    The clash of civilisations. Tbazwir vs. Strict rules. You just have to love it.

    • Uninterested Bystander says:

      I feel sorry for him, sort of.

      It’s much easier coming from a place where rules are not only enforced but habitually observed, to a place like Malta.

      I am almost constantly amazed by what I can get away with here.

      How ironic too that he was trying to ban smoking while in his own country the smoking ban is ignored everywhere, even by on-duty policemen.

      • andi says:

        Perhaps one ought to remember that the EU did not join us but we joined them

      • H.P. Baxxter says:

        SORRY? For a multi-millionaire who can’t dress, speak, write or converse and who’s reached the pinnacle of power?

        No bloody way.

        I’m actually sorry for the fact that in a couple of weeks, when the newspapers will have moved on to something else, he will still be a free citizen, and his vast wealth will still be available for his enjoyment.

        For we shouldn’t fool ourselves – he won’t be prosecuted in Malta.

      • Paul Bonnici says:

        He will be rewarded in Malta instead.

      • Grezz says:

        Yes, probably ‘rewarded’by being asked to stand for election on the Labour ticket, and possibly being made Minister of Finance.

  2. A E says:

    That press release should have read ‘on behalf of the former Commissioner……..’

  3. Qeghdin Sew says:

    “According to Mr Dalli, although he had asked Mr Barroso to give him 24 hours to consult his lawyers and family on whether he should resign, the Commission President gave him just 45 minutes to hand in his resignation or be sacked.”

    You’ve got to love that quote. This is the sort of approach that should have been taken with Austin Gatt and Dolores Cristina, incidentally.

  4. Candida says:

    Yes, truly, so rightly said H.P. Baxter. SORRY?

    Ma tarax! Sorry for us here who have to put up with it all.

  5. silvio farrugia says:

    What a difference from corrupt Malta. Here if one has connections, power or money will get away with murder.

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