His father, Vincenzo Bonello, was the curator of the national art collection in the interwar period, and among the Maltese patriots, like
Enrico Mizzi, who were deported and interned in
Uganda by the British colonial administration during World War II. Giovanni Bonello studied law and practiced for the first decades of his professional career, specializing in constitutional and human rights litigation in newly-independent
Malta. He defended over 170 human rights lawsuits before Maltese and international courts. At a point, was also the legal adviser of Malta's Chamber of Commerce. Bonello was, among others, the legal counsel of the Little Company of Mary in the saga that opposed the Irish nuns to
Dom Mintoff's government, which finally closed down their Blue Sisters Hospital. Bonello was also the author of "Page 13", the most widely read (and anonymous) political news column of The Sunday
Times of Malta in the 1970s and 1980s, dedicated to human rights issues during the
Labour government of
Dom Mintoff - "But I have never actually confirmed or denied the rumour myself", as he stated in 2008.
Judge at the European Court of Human Rights In 1990, the new
Nationalist government led by
Eddie Fenech Adami nominated Bonello as
Chief Justice of Malta and (
ex officio) President of the Constitutional Court, as well as Judge from Malta at the
European Court of Human Rights. Yet, Bonello declined the appointment, as Fenech Adami insisted Bonello should take both the positions in Malta, and in Strasbourg. Fenech Adami then appointed
Giuseppe Mifsud Bonnici to both posts. Bonello was finally replaced by
Vincent A. De Gaetano in 2010. Bonello has been considered a liberal judge. He has been the first judge whose separate opinions were published during his tenure, later also the separate opinions of the Portuguese judge
Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque were also published in Italy. Judge (later Court President)
Nicolas Bratza and leading authority on Human Rights Law
Michael O'Boyle published them with Wolf Legal Publishers of the Netherlands. His separate opinions were also collected in the book
When Judges Dissent, published in 2008. Upon his retirement from the European Court of Human Rights, Court president
Jean-Paul Costa said "Vanni" brought "robust independence of spirit and unflagging commitment to the protection of human rights". He displayed such qualities time and again in numerous separate opinions given in his unique and memorable style, which was "elegant as it is forceful", using "vocabulary as rich as it is rare". In fact, his opinions led Judge Bonello to attain "near-legendary" status among all those who followed Strasbourg case law, he said. President Costa said Judge Bonello was a true gentlemen who gained the respect and affection of all those who worked with him, whether they agreed with him or not. He was a marvellous ambassador for his profession and his country. "Along with his professional achievements, Vanni is a man of broad and deep culture, a connoisseur of great art and a distinguished historian. Now that he can finally take his leave of the Court, he can and will dedicate himself more fully to these intellectual and aesthetic pursuits." The president recounted an anecdote about the man he befriended during his long term at the Court. He said he had tried making a modest personal contribution to Judge Bonello's historical studies about the French occupation of Malta during the Napoleonic era, however, he soon realised his assistance was almost useless because Judge Bonello knew virtually everything there was to know on the subject.
Publications Bonello has published several history books, some of which led Bonello to be awarded the
National Book Prize by the
National Book Council. He also served as president for the
Malta Historical Society from 2011 to 2015. Bonello also wrote a series of articles for the
Times of Malta, celebrating the life of
Caterina Scappi, founder of the first hospital exclusively for women in Malta: "For her absolutely pioneer social commitment, for this revolutionary philanthropy, Scappi deserves the monument she never got. Only an obscure and overlooked tombstone in the Carmelite church in Valletta today bears witness to her existence, her feminist vision and her generous, farsighted altruism." In 2018 Bonello published
Misunderstanding the Constitution, a collection of essays first published on the
Times of Malta and dedicated to "How the Maltese judiciary undermines human rights". Robert Thake described it as an "indictment of the Maltese judicial system and the often-frightening condition of Malta’s human rights record". Bonello discusses the abysmal record of Maltese cases at the
European Court of Human Rights (85% of Malta's Constitutional Court decisions are overturned in Strasbourg) and how Maltese judges have misunderstood key human rights notions, including by pretending that the Constitutional Court is a "Court of last instance" (rejecting as ill-founded all application that would not have "exhausted domestic remedies") and by refusing to accept the
erga omnes validity of its own rulings. ==Awards==