vimarsana.com

Page 2 - ப்ரிந்ஸிபல் நிரந்தர செயலாளர் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Clean-up campaign shifts to tourist areas

Clean-up campaign shifts to tourist areas
timesofmalta.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from timesofmalta.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

The purchase agreement must be in writing to be legally binding | The Global Dispatch

The purchase agreement must be in writing to be legally binding | The Global Dispatch
theglobaldispatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobaldispatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Clean-up continuing in earnest, government says

na’ campaign involves 450 workers from various ministries. Their work has also included the removal of graffiti, particularly in Valletta, the replacement or maintenance of railings and other street furniture in various localities and repairs to walls along arterial roads. Principal Permanent Secretary Mario Cutajar said the work will be sustained in the coming months and will be accompanied by an educational campaign. Works along residential roads will be taken in hand in the coming weeks.   PREVIOUS

1,200 illegal road signs removed over the weekend

1,200 illegal road signs removed over the weekend Government is going full steam ahead on a campaign to clean up Malta s infrastructure 11 May 2021, 5:55pm by Nicole Meilak Around 1,200 illegal signs have been removed from arterial roads as part of a campaign called Insebbħu Pajjiżna (Making Our Country Beautiful). This exercise saw the removal of signs illegally installed on traffic signs, on pavements, and attached to walls. As part of the campaign, extensive cleaning was carried out on arterial roads, while benches, railings and other street furniture underwent maintenance. According to a government statement, works were also carried out in Triton Square and across other areas in the Valletta centre.

The cleaning needs to continue

A glance at travel fora will show that an oft-repeated negative comment about the island is that it is generally dirty, especially in places frequented by visitors. Civic pride in the upkeep of our rural and urban environment is not one of our community’s strengths. Cleaning campaigns are often launch­ed as a knee-jerk reaction intended to keep up appearances on the eve of special events involving the visit of some dignitaries. In this case, the VIPs are the tourists who will save Malta’s economy. The government’s cleaning campaign Insebbħu Malta is, of course, a most positive initiative. Street-cleaning, the removal of graffiti, the installation of street furniture in Valletta, replacement of non-functioning lighting in various parts of the island, the cleaning of beaches and the removal of bulky refuse, even of abandoned cars, should help give the island a much-needed facelift at the beginning of a desperately-needed tourist season.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.