A thunderclap of a different sort has shattered the Maltese afternoon. A fireworks factory, that peculiar Mediterranean marriage of artistry and hazard, has gone up in a cloud of smoke and, one presumes, misplaced ambition. The news, as news tends to be, is fragmented. Reports speak of injuries, of a blast that rattled windows and nerves in equal measure. And what of the response? Not from Valletta, but from Whitehall. British safety experts, it is said, have already offered their services.
Now, do not mistake me. I am not a man who sneers at expertise. The safety of fireworks manufacture is a serious business, requiring precision, respect for chemistry, and a healthy dose of fear. But the celerity with which our British mandarins have leapt to offer assistance is, to my mind, a symptom of our age: the reflexive internationalisation of every local tragedy. We have become a globe of vultures, circling the carcass of every disaster, hoping to extract a little moral capital, a little bureaucratic leverage.
Consider the historical context. The Victorians, for all their imperialism, understood the value of local knowledge. They sent engineers to build bridges in India, but they did not helicopter them in every time a monsoon flooded a village. Yet here we are, offering safety experts to a nation that has been making fireworks since the Knights of St. John. The Maltese are not amateurs. Their festa season is a tapestry of baroque piety and gunpowder. They have a tradition, a culture, a whole way of life built around the controlled explosion. To assume they need our guidance is, at best, patronising, and at worst, a form of intellectual colonialism.
The real tragedy is not the explosion itself, which is a statistical inevitability in any industry that handles unstable compounds. The tragedy is the predictable response: the committees, the reports, the new regulations written in a language no one on the ground speaks. We will see a flurry of paperwork, a surge of consultants' fees, and a new standard for safety that will make the process so expensive that only the state or large corporations can afford it. The small family workshops, the ones that have been making these spectacular displays for generations, will be squeezed out. And then we will wonder why the fireworks show is a pale shadow of what it once was.
I am not advocating for reckless endangerment. But let us be honest: life is risk. The desire to eliminate every last grain of danger is a modern pathology, one that sterilises culture and drains it of vitality. The Maltese fireworks are not just an industry; they are an art form, a celebration of communal identity. To treat this accident as an opportunity to impose a foreign safety regime is to miss the point entirely.
The British offer of assistance is, no doubt, well-intentioned. But good intentions, as the road to hell demonstrates, count for little. What the Maltese need is not our experts, but our respect. They need us to acknowledge that their tragedy is theirs to mourn, their recovery theirs to manage. They need, in short, to be left alone to rebuild their tradition in their own way.
But no. That would be too simple. So we will have our experts, our reports, our recommendations. We will have our moment of moral superiority, our chance to tut-tut at the backward ways of the Mediterranean. And the fireworks will be the less for it.
A plague on all your safety briefings. Let the Maltese get back to doing what they do best: lighting up the sky with a little bit of madness and a whole lot of soul.









