to normal because our mother is never coming back. and we, as a family, have years of fighting ahead. do you still feel that today? i think i ll always feel that. i think we ll be in the courts for the rest of our lives in some form of criminal or civil proceedings. ithink, you know, there are these moments where you get small measures ofjustice, prosecutions, hopefully convictions. but at the end of the day, nothing will return her to us. paul caruana galizia, thank you so much forjoining me on hardtalk. thank you so much.
is my guest today. what are the lessons of this tragic death in malta? paul caruana galizia, welcome to hardtalk. thank you so much for having me. it is a great pleasure to have you here and, indeed, also a pleasure to read your book. you ve just published it a death in malta: an assassination and a family s quest forjustice, you call it. you ve worked on this book for a long time. it is six years since your
and i was in london, as you said, and i kept getting a call from a maltese number i didn t recognise, until. ..i finally picked up to hear matthew tell me, paul, there was a bomb in her car. come home now. and i remember that moment perfectly because it s one of these moments where your sense of time totally falls apart. i felt like there was an eternity between every one of matthew s words, and i felt like i was outside myself looking at myself. it was a very difficult day, because it was 2pm london time. the next flight home was at half eight from heathrow. the flight is three hours. and it s hard. it s hard to explain how strange it is that your mind tries to make sense