Friday, February 7, 2014

Interesting article to read!

 Foreigners go home

Published: August 23, 2010 at 6:13pm
Istja, hemm wahda l-vera orrajt hemm, Surgent.
Istja, hemm wahda l-vera orrajt hemm, Surgent.
I don’t think you have to be a genius to work out that resentment towards holiday-makers – more so if they are young and beside themselves with the thrill of it all – simmers beneath the arrest and prosecution of six people for skinny-dipping after a night out in Paceville.
In the prosecution of four Italians, two of whom are teenagers, for doing just that, a police officer told the court that they swam naked in front of “a thousand people” at 3.30am.
In front of a thousand people? Dear heavens, those at the back of the crowd would really have had to crane their necks and elbow their neighbours aside to get a good look at something they’d all seen before, in the mirror if nowhere else.
And that’s only if they could give a damn, which they probably couldn’t.
The officer also told the court that he and his colleagues went down to the bay to arrest the young men after receiving several reports from outraged observers. “They felt insulted by the men’s behaviour,” the officer said.
There can’t have been many old ladies walking their poodles in Paceville at 3am, so who were those people who felt insulted by the sight of a teenager taking his clothes off and jumping into the water?
The police officer told the magistrate – his victims being Italian, you see – that when we visit the Fontana di Trevi in Rome we “do not behave irresponsibly as they have done here”. He can’t have been thinking of Anita Ekberg in La Dolce Vita, and he has clearly never heard of what happens in every city with a famous fountain on New Year’s Eve.
It’s the policeman’s thinking that interests me: why the Fontana di Trevi? Doesn’t he know that Italy has an exceptionally long coastline because of its unusual shape? Had those teenagers been found cavorting naked beneath the water-spouts outside the Grandmaster’s Palace in Valletta, then I might begin to understand the comparison. But comparing a beach used exclusively by students to what is possibly the world’s most famous fountain is nonsensical.
Another thing that interests me is the police officer’s description of skinny-dipping as irresponsible. How and why is it irresponsible? Nothing and nobody is put at risk. There are no children to be scandalised in Paceville in the small hours. Playing with fireworks in unsafe conditions and blowing the place up is irresponsible. Skinny-dipping is harmless horseplay.
If the police did indeed receive reports from concerned citizens, then it’s a safe bet that what these concerned citizens were communicating was an emotion far deeper and wider than mere annoyance at the sight of a bunch of teenagers swimming naked in the middle of the night: resentment towards the very presence of those teenagers in their territory.
And it’s the same with the police. I can’t help getting the feeling that they are sick to the gills of ‘barranin’ and their problems, and that arresting some kids for swimming in the nude was a form of catharsis for them.
CHEAP SLEAZE
I’m guessing that people like Sliema mayor Nikki Dimech and Robert Arrigo’s former company driver Stephen Buhagiar have never heard the saying that you might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb.
The worst kind of sleaze isn’t big-time sleaze, but the cheap, small-time sleaze that these two are reported to have hatched up between them.
Breaking the law and compromising principles and morality – if you have any to start with, that is – over the big money is one thing. We can understand how even the best of men can be sucked in by that kind of overwhelming temptation. The cost-benefit analysis is too enticing.
But what sort of person do you have to be to compromise yourself and prejudice your political career for commission on contracts issued by a local council? You’ve got to be very cheap, very stupid or very unprincipled.
It’s a high risk strategy for relatively meagre rewards. In other words, just not worth it, and that’s without considering the morality aspect and the law-breaking involved.
As for engaging a driver as a contracts manager, please spare me the details.
This article was published in The Malta Independent on 19 August.

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

 JUSTICE IN MALTA - where skinny dipping can get you a bigger sentence than assaulting foreign bird wild life volunteers keeping an eye on illegal hunting! 


IS THIS JUSTICE????

The articles mentioned in video about the nudity fines:

Students fined for swimming naked

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100811/local/students-fined-for-swimming-naked.321974

Another four foreign students convicted for skinny dipping

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20100814/local/another-four-foreign-students-convicted-for-skinny-dipping.322367



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VisVu1gbTWk

Nudism and topless bathing in Malta

http://zjuzdme.org/blog/2014/02/04/nudism-and-topless-bathing-in-malta/

Sunday, January 5, 2014

The Maltese constitution protects the freedom of belief in any religion yet the law bans naturism! So is the case in many countries, if not banning totally naturist sites lack enough in number yet there are many naturist 'worshipers'! Together we can change this!!



PLEASE VISIT AND LIKE OUR MORE ACTIVE PAGE ON FACEBOOK: Legalize-Nudist-beaches-and-topless-bathing-in-Malta


 Legalize Nudist beaches and topless bathing in Malta

As a non political group we criticize any political party that is simply denying our rights to swim naked with nature at allocated spots. This cartoon applies to both the PL and PN past and present governments.


Saturday, October 26, 2013

MINORITY RIGHTS BEING SIDED AWAY

‘a strong debate would reflect that the Maltese society was "a nation which cared about minorities".
The Civil Liberties Act, she said, was a government commitment to continue "breaking down barriers".
"This is not about gay rights but about human rights. We want to live in a society where every individual enjoys the same rights, with an equal access to opportunities. The point of departure being that we are all human beings," Dalli said.

The ‘Legalize Nudist beaches and topless bathing in Malta’ facebook pressure group commends the government for discussing the civil union bill, however, Hon Dalli, other PL officials and the opposition seem to infer that LGBT are the only minority group in Malta. In our case minister Dalli said that having naturist beaches was not on the PL manifesto!  

Minority groups, include women, disabled people, ethnic and religious minorities, immigrants, gay persons, children, the elderly, hunters and us naturists. We wish that every effort is made to ensure that ALL persons living in Malta TRULY do not become victims of discrimination and political agendas that favour majorities. Sometimes our Constitution gives minorities rights but then our laws, conditions or culture take this away from us! Government needs to ascertain that minority’s fundamental human rights and civil liberties are safeguarded. 

As a pressure group we believe that naturism is a liberating lifestyle and belief which encourages self-respect, respect for others and for the environment, and embodies freedom and a unique sense of communion with nature. It is purposefully non-erotic and non-sexual and engenders a wholesome appreciation of self and others.’  We therefore believe that the government and opposition need not side us away from main minority groups as our right to practice our belief is very valid and accepted worldwide. 

 Similarly other groups such as the physically/mentally disabled and ethnic/migrant/religious groups need urgent discussion and attention. For example, with regards to some female groups various inadequate conditions and situations make them a minority group as they are being dominated by abuse of many forms. For example, ‘seven out of 10 working women claim that their employer does not have an equal opportunity policy at work to avoid discrimination and harassment. One in every 10 women experienced some form of sexual harassment at work but half did not report the abuse or avoided the perpetrator. Only one in three of those harassed said they confronted their abuser’ (http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20120116/local/most-women-feel-discriminated.402550).

We encourage the government and opposition therefore to not ‘dwell’ solely on LGBT rights but rather, discuss all minority rights with equal importance and no political gain hunting! This ensures real "breaking down barriers" and fundamental civil and human rights for all. In some instances we are seeing more attention given to animal rights than certain minority groups and this is sad and concerning!


Thank you