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Changes to the petition
15.10.2025 de
Dilekçe şu adrese hitaben yazılmıştır: Malta's Prime Minister; Minister for Culture, Lands and Local Government; Planning Authority; Superintendence of Cultural Heritage
The Santa Verna Temple is one of Malta’s most important, yet unprotected archaeological sites. Only a few megaliths are visible today; however, recent excavations from the international FRAGSUS project revealed the remains of a five-apse temple dating to 3800 BCE. Across the surrounding plateau, which also includes Malta’s famous Ġgantija Temples and the Xagħra Circle hypogeum, archaeologists also unearthed remains of settlements dating back to c. 5400 BCE.
The limited buffer zone around the temple (established in 1998) did not adequately protect this unique and stunning archaeological landscape. Today, harmful constructions threaten thousands of years of untouched prehistory—prehistory that can shed light on one of the world’s most unique civilizations. Just 200 m west of the temple, appalling new stables scar the once-pristine land. Even more egregious is the situation facing the Ta’ Lablab ancient caves and Neolithic burial area 230 m north of the temple.
In 2012, a Cultural Heritage officer warned that parts of Ta’ Lablab overlapped the temple’s buffer zone and should be protected. Yet, in 2022, authorities approved the demolition of its beautiful cave system for a mere €5,000 Heritage “Gain” settlement.
Worse, after construction in Ta’ Lablab commenced, a local resident discovered a half-bulldozed pit filled with human bones and other remains scattered across the field by the machinery, confirmed by a specialist to be a Temple Period burial pit containing seven human skulls (mostly children’s).
Documents from Malta’s Environment Planning and Review Tribunal reveal that the assigned archaeological monitor supervising construction failed to report the human remains before the resident found them, clearly violating cultural heritage laws. If it were not for the local resident’s intervention, all traces of the site would have been bulldozed into oblivion.
Authorities should have taken immediate action to protect the site once the Neolithic burial pit was discovered: halting the works, expanding the temple’s buffer zone, and conducting a proper study of its ancient soil. Instead, they allowed applications for 19 maisonettes, jacuzzis, and a basement parking garage to proceed (PA/5171/23, PA/3174/23, and PA/02771/25). Meanwhile, a separate planning proposal for two new roads, one of which cuts through the temple’s buffer zone, had already been endorsed by a separate governmental department.
The damage extends beyond archaeology; the plateau’s ecosystem and biodiversity are also threatened. The area is home to hedgehogs, endemic Maltese wall lizards, chameleons, threatened bats, and flora such as endemic Maltese salt-trees and giant fennel. If Malta’s authorities do not immediately suspend the application permits and stop construction on Santa Verna’s plateau, ecological devastation will also ensue.
We believe the failure to protect the Santa Verna archaeological landscape violates multiple international conventions, especially the 1992 Convention for the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage of Europe (signed in Valletta, Malta’s own capital city), as well as the UNESCO World Heritage Convention (ratified by Malta in 1978), Malta’s Cultural Heritage Act (2002), and the Council of Europe Landscape Convention (ratified this year in 2025).
Worse, recent proposed “reforms” to Malta’s land planning laws would strip citizens, NGOs, and even the courts of their power to halt environmental and heritage abuses such as those occurring near Santa Verna. This proposed legislation removes the very checks and balances that safeguard cultural and environmental sites and opens more sites to development. Thousands at the recent Ġustizzja għal Artna / “Justice for our Land” march (4 Oct. 2025) protested this betrayal of trust, yet the government still refuses to withdraw the proposals.
As of this writing, over 1,400 Maltese Identity Card holders have signed a Parliamentary petition requesting protection for Santa Verna’s archaeological landscape. We now open the issue to the international community and are asking for your help. We call on all the authorities of Malta, whether it is Parliament, the Prime Minister, or Cultural Heritage officals to extend the archaeological buffer zone around the temple, protect the Għajn Lukin plateau and safeguard the Ta'Lablab area--especially the caves. All proposed roads and developments should be halted. We also petition UNESCO and all other international heritage bodies to intervene to appeal to Malta’s political authorities to protect Santa Verna’s entire plateau: preserving its beauty and its scientific and cultural heritage for future generations. The archaeology of Santa Verna is not just Malta’s—it belongs to the world—and the world should protect it.
Feel free to read more about the issue here . To follow updates about the issue, feel free to follow MALTA-ARCH on Facebook or Instagram.
Sources:
https://www.bajr.org/maltas-7000-year-old-santa-verna-temple-under-immediate-threat-from-development/
https://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2025-08-16/local-news/Campaigners-sound-alarm-over-destruction-of-Santa-Verna-Archaeological-Landscape-in-Gozo-6736272432
Dilekçe başlatıldı:
13.10.2025
Koleksiyon sona eriyor:
21.12.2025
Bölge :
Malta
Konu:
Çevre
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Because I value heritage