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Italy: Berlusconi intensifies his attacks on the judiciary
By Peter Schwarz
19 September 2003
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At the beginning of this month, Italian prime minister Silvio
Berlusconi once again hit the headlines with an onslaught against
the judiciary. In an interview with the right-wing British magazine
the Spectator during his recent holiday in Sardinia, the
current chairman of the European Union (EU) council declared:
These judges are mad twice over. First because they are
politically that way, and second because they are mad anyway.
To do that job you need to be mentally disturbed, anthropologically
different from the rest of humanity.
Berlusconi was referring to the legal actions against Giulio
Andreotti, the seven-times Christian Democrat prime minister and
lifelong senator, who had close links to the Mafia, as a court
in Palermo confirmed this summer. But Berlusconis latest
remarks fit seamlessly into the vendetta waged for years by the
richest man in Italy against judges and public prosecutors, whom
he declaims alternatively as red robes or communists
in disguise.
Berlusconi is pursuing two aims with his campaign against the
judiciary. In the first place, he is seeking to protect himself
and his company empire Fininvest against legal investigations.
The multibillionaire has been the subject of over a dozen trials
on charges of fiddling the books, tax evasion or bribery, and
he has only been able to avoid sentencing through appeals or last-minute
changes to the law. In three cases, he was actually sentenced
to a total of six years in prison by lower courts, only to have
their decisions overturned. Second, he is seeking to annul the
existing division of state power and evade any sort of judicial
control over the increasingly arbitrary activities of his government
by intimidating and muzzling judges.
Only this summer, and in great haste, the right-wing parliamentary
majority passed an immunity law tailored entirely to the requirements
of the head of government when it became clear that a court in
Milan was preparing to sentence him for the bribery of judges.
With the judges hands tied, Berlusconi then went on the
offensive and appointed a parliamentary commission to investigate
whether, according to party speaker Sandro Bondi, there is among
judges and state prosecutors a criminal conspiracy aimed
at overthrowing the democratic institutions of Italy. At
the same time, the Justice Ministry initiated investigations into
an abuse of office by the two prosecutors in the trial against
Berlusconi.
Judges in Milan certified that Berlusconis Fininvest
concern was guilty of corruption that was without parallel
in Italian history and perhaps in the entire world. These
words are recorded in the reasons for judgement in another trial,
in which Berlusconis closest associate, Cesare Previti,
was sentenced to 11 years in jail by the lower court. According
to the judges, Previti and his co-workers had elevated corruption
to a way of life.
Italian president Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, who reacted with restraint
to previous comments of Berlusconi abusing the judiciary, answered
this latest outburst in the Spectator with a clear reprimand
for the head of government. Ciampi, who is also president of the
Supreme Judicial Council, published a statement in which he declared
his complete confidence in the judges and attorneys.
But Berlusconi showed not the least intention of pulling back.
He is a politician who has the courage to say what the majority
of Italians think, declared government speaker Paolo Bonaiuti.
And the mouthpiece for Berlusconis party Forza Italia, Sandro
Bondi, threatened: Until we have managed to wipe out that
part of the judiciary which is pursuing political aims, then we
cannot say we are living in a civilised and democratic country.
In the meantime, conflicts between leading figures of the Italian
state and official political life are steadily intensifying.
Berlusconi has reacted to growing pressure by directing an
unprecedented torrent of abuse at his political opponents, hoping
that some of it will stick. At the same time, he has posed as
the injured party. The opposition was undemocratic
and is vilifying the government, he complained. Up
to 80 percent of the media was oriented to the left, he claimedan
absurd statement, considering the fact that Berlusconi holds a
monopoly on Italian television and controls a number of the main
newspapers.
For months, the newspapers and television stations controlled
by Berlusconi have been carrying out an intensive campaign against
the chairman of the EU commission, Romano Prodi, who is expected
to be Berlusconis main challenger in Italian parliamentary
elections planned for 2006. The anti-Prodi campaign maintains
that in 1997 he took bribes when two Italian state concerns took
over interests in the Serbian telephone companya move that
led to huge losses, as it later became clear. The claims are based
on the testimony of a dubious businessman, who has also made the
same accusations against Piero Fassino, but without providing
any proof. At the time of the transaction, Fassino was a state
secretary in the foreign ministry and today he leads the largest
of Italys opposition partiesthe Left Democrats.
On September 1, Fassino accused Berlusconi in the paper Corriere
della Sera of being personally behind the accusations and
of leading a sort of insidious civil war against the
opposition, in order to butcher the enemy. He went
on to compare Berlusconi to the Nazi propaganda minister Goebbels,
declaring that he (Berlusconi) uses the latters technique:
vilification, vilification. Berlusconi reacted by lodging
a charge of slander against the leader of the opposition and demanding
15 million euros in damages. Fassino took up the challenge by
voluntarily abandoning his parliamentary immunity.
These clashes in the press and the courts cannot hide the fact
that the opposition is not interested in mobilising a popular
movement against Berlusconi. During its own five years in office,
the opposition introduced a drastic policy of budget cuts, involving
huge attacks on the majority of the populationand thereby
opened the way for the election of Berlusconi, whose first government
had collapsed ignominiously in 1995. Since then, the opposition
has remained distinctly restrained under conditions in which millions
of Italians have taken to the streets on a number of occasions
to protest Berlusconis own attacks on the welfare state
and democratic rights as well as his support for the war in Iraq.
In terms of its political outlook, the opposition has little real
differences with Berlusconi. They hope to replace him at the next
electionand then push ahead with his policies.
Berlusconi, however, is not prepared to concede so easily.
Barely had the dust settled after his broadside against the judges
when the Spectator published the second part of his interview,
provoking further scandal. In the interview, Berlusconi made favourable
remarks about Benito Mussolini. Flying in the face of historical
evidence, he claimed the fascist dictator never killed anybody.
He sent people on holiday when he wanted to detain them.
His latest outburst should be regarded not as a slip of the
tongue, but rather a warning. When it comes to the defence of
his own interests and power, Berlusconi, who heads a coalition
with Mussolinis heirsthe National Alliancewill
not be satisfied with mere verbal attacks on the judiciary. He
will not shrink from even more far-reaching attacks on democracy
using dictatorial measures.
Comments made by the writer and Mussolini biographer Nicholas
Farrell, who carried out the interview with Berlusconi for the
Spectator, give an indication of the views that predominate
in such circles. He expressed his agreement with Berlusconi and
stressed that the Italian Fascists did not have to resort to murder
in order to stay in power. There was no need. You see, Mussoliniuntil
he started losing battleswas very popular. The historian
Farrell appears to have overlooked the fact that the Fasci, the
armed thugs who gave their name to the Italian movement, paved
the way to power for Il Duce with a campaign of murder and terror
aimed against the organised working class. Farrell also blatantly
ignores the many thousands of resistance fighters who lost their
lives in the struggle against fascism.
See Also:
Italys new media law tailor-made
for Berlusconi
[10 September 2003]
Berlusconi and Europe
[16 July 2003]
Berlusconi attacks independence
of the Italian judiciary
[9 May 2003]
Italys Berlusconi
and his House of Freedomsa new dimension in
the development of the right wing in Europe
[7 May 2001]
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