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Located in the Mediterranean Sea,
just south of Sicily, the Maltese archipelago mainly consists of three islands:
Malta, Gozo and Comino. Total population is around 400,000 people.
The
largest island of the group is Malta, from which the archipelago takes its name.
Valletta, the capital, is the cultural, administrative and commercial centre of
the archipelago. Malta is well served with harbours, chief of which is the Valletta
Grand Harbour. Malta's international airport is situated five kilometres from the
capital.
The
second largest island, Gozo is topographically quite different from Malta. Quaintly
attractive for its less industrialised way of life, Gozo can be reached from Malta
by ferry-boat from Cirkewwa and Pieta, near Valletta, and by helicopter from the
airport.
The distance between Malta and the nearest point in Sicily is 93 km. The distance
from the nearest point on the North African mainland (Tunisia) is 288 km. Gibraltar
is 1,826 km to the west and Alexandria is 1,510 km to the east.
Malta has gone a long way from being a strategic landmark to a strategic location
in today's globalised business community. When it obtained its independence from
Britian in 1964 Malta had to wake up and transform its economy based on military
spending by foreign powers in Malta to a peace-time economy. Manufacturing and tourism
where the first industries to emerge, but today the Maltese Islands are levering
more on their strategic presence in the centre of the Mediterranean with the concept
of being a hub in such sectors are tourism, financial services, transport and telecommunications.
Over the past decade, Malta has moved from being an offshore to an onshore jurisdiction.
It has completed a programme of reforming all its finance sector legislation in
line with international best practice and was one of the first six countries in
the world to reach an advanced accord on fiscal matters with the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). As a result of this agreement Malta
is NOT considered as a tax haven. It is actively involved with the OECD, the EU
and the Commonwealth in modelling global regulatory policy.
Malta’s finance industry has benefited significantly from the country’s
national policy of moving to the mainstream. Financial services is the fastest growing
sector of the Maltese economy and one of the most important employers of trained
professional staff.

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