Fifteen NGOs together with a group of residents from Pembroke and Swieqi are sounding the alarm on Infrastructure Malta’s plans for a patchwork of tunnels and roads, which they claim are being doen to serve big developers. 

In a statement, 15 NGOs as well as a group of Swieqi and Pembroke residents said these plans were kept hidden until the very last minute, leaving insufficient time for the public to understand their real implications during the objection period. 

Now that they have been unveiled, it is becoming increasingly clear that this project will do very little to address the severe traffic problems experienced by residents, the NGOs and residents said. 

Instead, the largest part of these tunnels and roads are designed to accommodate big developers and their ambitions for "monstrous" projects in the area, chief among them the db Group project on the ex-ITS site, the statement said. 

The NGO said that according to Infrastructure Malta’s plans, access to Pembroke and Swieqi will in no way be facilitated and the traffic nightmare currently experienced by residents will remain. 

This project instead envisages a long route, part road, part tunnel, leading to the proposed db Group project.

The road leading to this tunnel would obliterate a natural area in St Patrick’s, Pembroke, and the 1.5km tunnel would be located under a Natura 2000 site with very likely negative impact as regards noise pollution and fresh water biodiversity, the statement continued. 

The planned DB Group development overlooking in Pembroke.The planned DB Group development overlooking in Pembroke.

They noted how the idea of a tunnel in Pembroke had already featured in the now-defunct Paceville masterplan, where it was designed to serve the entire area by passing under St Andrew’s without affecting the green area in St Patrick’s.

This previous plan seems to have been scrapped for three local tunnels that simply serve the db Group and other possible large-scale commercial projects in the St George’s area, effectively taking natural and open spaces from the public to accommodate big developers, the NGOs said. 

Impact on residents' quality of life

The proposed plan will also result in cars and traffic getting closer to residences in Pembroke and Swieqi, with a deleterious impact on people’s health and quality of life.

The project will make life completely miserable for residents during the construction period, which is expected to take many years due to its complexity, the NGOs said. Serious concerns were also raised about the project's impact on the natural and heritage environment. 

The statement said that besides ruining the green area of St. Patrick’s, the location of a tunnel in the Għar Ħarq Ħammiem area - a unique site of natural, geological and scientific importance, is disturbing. 

They pointed out that the impact on scheduled historical sites brought about by the massive drilling for these tunnels is not yet known, and is likely to be adverse. 

The proposed tunnels will also generate an inordinate amount of excavation waste and it is not known how and where this will be disposed of, they continued. 

NGOs and residents are totally in favour of a much-needed infrastructural upgrade in the area.

However, they demand that such an upgrade serves the people, improves their quality of life and safeguards the natural environment, instead of short-changing everyone in order to accommodate a few developers, the statement concluded.

The statement was signed by a group of Pembroke and Swieqi residents and 15 NGOs: Archaeological Society of Malta, Attard Residents Environmental Network, Bicycle Advocacy Group, BirdLife Malta, Din l-Art Ħelwa, Flimkien Għal Ambjent Aħjar, Friends of the Earth Malta, Futur Ambjent Wieħed, Green House, Isles of the Left, Moviment Graffitti, Nature Trust Malta, Ramblers Association Malta, Triq l-Għarbiel Residents Group and Żminijietna – Voice of the Left.

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