Is this why Ramona tas-Super One is paid Eur 30,000 a year?
Published:
June 26, 2013 at 1:22am
Ramona Attard, whose claim to fame is hosting a daily show on the Labour Party’s television station and chasing Nationalist politicians in the electoral campaign without bothering to wash her hair or her face, is Manuel Mallia’s chief of communications, a job for which she is paid Eur 30,000 a year.
Well, she definitely not wertit. Look at the heading to this National Security Ministry press release.
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http://gov.mt/en/Government/Press%20Releases/Press%20Photos/Pages/2013/June/day24/pr1326-MHAS.aspx
Minister for National Security, the Army, the Police, Broadcasting (but not Justice) needs more resources with regards to English as also public communication.
Funny you should say that – take the forces as an example. He’s doing away with credible and proven talent on the whim of officers within the force that are motivated by greed, political affiliation and their knowledge of their severe shortcomings.
AFM is currently being sniped at, and taken to pieces because officers stood their ground and have tried to take the force forward demanding higher standards! Whilst on standards one cannot but mention how the ministry has lowered standards for the selection of senior officers, with a process that is now completely subjective and handled at a political level without any input from the military.
So do not mention lack of resources, because the resources are available, but the ministry, in line with the customer service frame of mind, is doing away with capability.
Ya just gotta laff. Sigh.
This might be a sweeping statement but they’re all not worth it. OK, say 99% of them aren’t.
I’d say 99.9%. If you want to be really generous, 99.7%.
See! See what grimy hair can do…
Holy moly!
Cringeworthy.
Meritocracy.
Meritocretins.
Proves you don’t have to pay peanuts to get monkeys.
I don’t get it. What the news value in this?
The Cyber Crime Unit has been understaffed and lacked equipment for ages. The headline points to government inefficiency; shouldn’t it be saying that the new government will be staffing the unit and getting the latest equipment, instead?
And what has triggered this sudden need to focus on that unit when there are real problems going on in the police right now – is it meant to divert attention from the real problems?
If I’m not mistaken, Saviour Balzan has been insinuating that the same unit has been allegedly tapping phone conversations – which it can’t do by no stretch of the imagination, as one would need very specific equipment for that.
Ramona, please learn to spell ‘n-e-w-s v-a-l-u-e’ first.
Ghalihom dawn, mhux necessarju titkellem u tikteb tajjeb bl-Ingliz. “Ahna Maltin He!”
Jitkellmu bl-Ingliz qishom qed jitkellmu bil-Malti u l-ftit li jiktbu u jitkellmu Ingliz tajjeb, ibatu mill-pronunzja jigifieri meta jitkellmu bl-Ingliz, avolja ikun Ingliz “jghaddi”, it-ton li jitkellmu bih huwa ton Malti.
Il-hmar taqtaghlu denbu, hmar jibqa’ – bla denb, iva, imma xorta hmar, anzi aktar ikrah!
Ma nafx, izda, jekk xaghar nadif u ppettnat sewwa lil dak li jkun jaghmlux bravu
I think Saviour Balzan was right, Caflisa. The police do possess that equipment.
Post 9/11 all Governments have it. It depends how they use it though and what criteria is actually applied.