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BICAL
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October 27 2003
Lm30,000 yearly to former firm for liquidating BICAL’s assets
BICAL bank shareholders Henry and Cecil Pace have to face the
daily toll of the squandering of the assets of their former bank.
According to evidence given in court late this week, Patrick Calafato,
an assistant to the controller of the BICAL bank on loan from
the Grant Thornton auditing firm, the annual payment to the audit
firm is of Lm30,000 for assisting the liquidation of companies
and payments of debts by BICAL associated companies.
Sealing off Cecil Pace’s fate –
Mintoff lets the sword fall
A whispered message from a court marshal had already informed
Cecil that his fate had been sealed by the powers that be. In
October 1977, Pace is sitting in Court, surrounded by the court
marshals as he awaits judgement by Judge Giovanni Refalo. He is
given fourteen years in jail, the maximum sentence possible for
the crimes he is convicted for.
"I was told by a court marshal that minutes before Refalo
delivered his verdict, he had been in conversation with Dom Mintoff.
Refalo had asked the court marshal to put him into contact with
Mintoff. The marshal overheard the conversation from a telephone
extension.
"The marshal told me that Refalo had told Mintoff that he
was about to sentence me and that he could not send me to prison
for more than 14 years.
"Mintoff told him, ‘He’ll have to do all of them.’
Refalo told Mintoff that I would eventually be eligible for some
pardon for good conduct. Mintoff must have shrugged, told that
and said ‘I will see about that.’ When Refalo asked
him what he should do about the fact that I had already been detained
and arrested for five full years between October 1972 and October
1977, Mintoff answered, ‘No. Make sure the detention is not
taken into account.’ I would spend all the years up to 1985
in jail."
Welcome to Kordin
"The minute we arrived in prison, my brother Henry and I
were taken to the prison director, Ronald C Theuma, to be ‘welcomed’
to our new residence. These were the first words he told us: ‘From
this time onwards, you two are no longer sirs. There will be no
‘sir,’ and no ‘Mr. Pace.’ I smiled at that.
Theuma looked at me and asked what I had to smile about –
‘Do you know what nothing is?’ he asked, ‘You are
nothing here. What are you laughing at?’
"I told him that saying that meant I had been someone for
him, for him to now tell me I was nothing. When I told him it
was he who would never amount to anything, it marked the start
of a tumultuous relationship between me and the prison authorities.
A charge a day – that would be my life in prison."
Cecil Pace says the conditions in jail were horrible. Inmates
were given just less than a gallon of water a day, poured into
a bucket tin from a nearby well. "We spent two years queuing
up for water from a well. We never had running water then. We
had to drink from that water, wash ourselves and wash our clothes."
Their toilet was a bucket in the cell, and they were given just
one toilet roll a month. "I remember we used to tip the bucket
every day into a gully. One of the prison wardens, a very cheeky
character, used to laugh at me. I remember ‘accidentally’
slipping on the stairs and tipping a bucketful of faeces on the
warden."
The prison was also rat-infested. Pace tried, without success,
to get the prison director to remedy the situation. "Eventually,
an inmate and I went down to the workshop and cut some grills,
stuck them onto the open drains and holes and managed to keep
the vermin out."
Cecil was amazed to find out there was a dearth of literature
in Kordin. The ‘library’ only had a handful of books.
"I remember seeing some inmates flipping over the pages of
a book. I soon realised that they were really ‘feeling’
the pages. They would run out of toilet paper, since we were only
given one roll a month, so they would tear off the pages from
books."
So Pace got to work and started writing letters to embassies during
his spare moments down at court, in between cases. Soon enough,
boxes full of books from the embassies would arrive at the jail.
Pace then proceeded to archive all the books. He left jail in
1985 leaving behind a library stocked with 30,000 titles.
"I used to write a lot in jail. Letters to my wife mostly,
but anything really, as long as it kept my mind working. People
go crazy in prison, it is so boring. I used to write long letters
to my wife. One day, during some Easter presentation, the authorities
decided to give us a figolla for the day, and Ronald Theuma, the
prison director made the presentations. His wife was also there.
When my turn arrived, she told me: ‘Oh I have been waiting
to meet you Mr Pace. Those letters you write to your wife, they
just break my heart.’ I was flabbergasted. Theuma used to
take my letters home to his wife so she could read them."
Cecil Pace kept on fighting for his rights whilst in prison, trying
to keep his empire together as controllers hacked at his companies’
assets. Once Karmenu Mifsud Bonnici visited him in jail at eleven
‘o’ clock at night, demanding he sign a blank paper
for the sale of the Pace fleet. Pace had to authorise all the
sales of his assets with his signature. Pace asked him what was
the price KMB had asked for his expensive fleet. But KMB just
wanted him to sign the blank paper.
"KMB told me to sign or it would be worse for me. I told
him ‘what could be worse then being here? Are you going to
send me to jail? Because I’m already here, and believe me
there’s enough space for you too.’
"The next day in court, my lawyer managed to meet up with
KMB to ask him what the offer was for the ships. One of ships
was to be sold for the measly value of a couple of thousands to
the fledgling Sea Malta. Since then, I never signed another authorisation
for the sale of my assets, and the controllers made sure my assets
would ‘given’ away for little, if not for nothing."
You were too powerful – Mintoff pops in to say hello to Cecil
"What’s up then?" Mintoff told Pace, as he stumbled
into the prisoner in hospital while on a visit to see one a Labour
MP.
Pace had been admitted into hospital after having been administered
three-days of medication in one single sitting by the prison wardens.
A common occurrence, Pace would faint and be admitted to hospital.
One day, Mintoff happened to be pacing down his corridor when
he was informed that Cecil Pace was lying in bed.
"What’s up with you then?" Mintoff said as he entered
Cecil Pace’s ward.
"It looks like I am better than what you would have wished
me," Pace retorted.
But Mintoff replied, "You brought it all on yourself with
your own hands."
"What do you mean?" Cecil Pace queried.
"Remember the advice you had given me on the Freeport?"
Mintoff recalled. "You had told me not to give all power
at the Freeport to just one person, or maybe a foreign interest,
because that power would have too strong an influence on the economy….And
you were in that position," Mintoff said solemnly, and departed.
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