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Italy: Court overturns Berlusconis immunity law
By Marianne Arens
23 January 2004
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On January 13, the Italian constitutional court revoked a law
that had granted Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi immunity from
criminal prosecution until the end of his term in office.
The immunity law was drawn up and named after Renato Schifani,
the senate fraction chairman of Berlusconis own party, Forza
Italia. The Italian parliament passed the legislation in record
time in June 2003. The law provided immunity from prosecution
for five top state officialsthe prime minister, the state
president, the presidents of both parliamentary chambers and the
president of the constitutional court. In reality, the immunity
law was tailored to protect Berlusconi, who was facing corruption
charges in a Milan court for allegedly bribing judges.
The law halted the legal proceedings, averting the highly embarrassing
scenario of Berlusconi being convicted and potentially facing
a jail sentence just after his having taken over as chair of the
Council of the European Union.
The constitutional court ruled that the Schifani law violates
the principle of equal treatment for all citizens and therefore
is invalid.
A conflict between the government and the judiciary
The decision brings to a head a conflict that has been brewing
for some time between a section of the Italian judiciary and the
government. Judges and attorneys involved in the criminal proceedings
against Berlusconi and other corruption cases have applauded the
constitutional courts decision, while the prime ministers
henchmen have resorted to crude defamation of the judiciary.
Forza Italias lawyer Carlo Taormina proclaimed that the
conservative-leaning judges of the constitutional court were dammed
communists, who had rendered a political judgement.
In 2001, Taormina was removed from his post as undersecretary
of state after his tirades against the legal profession became
increasingly strident.
Gaetano Pecorella, Berlusconis chief lawyer, who is also
a Forza Italia parliamentary deputy and president of the parliamentary
judicial commission, commented on the decision in an interview
with the French newspaper Le Monde. He praised the immunity
law because, as he bluntly declared, the prime minister
and other leading state representatives no longer have to submit
to judicial decisions during their entire period in office.
Now, after the reversal of the law, he regretted that Italy would
become an exceptional case in Europe, where the exercise
of a leading institutional responsibility can be interrupted by
the decision of a judge.
Senator Paolo Guzzanti (Forza Italia) went even further, claiming:
Immunity is not a parliamentary privilege, but rather a
historical guarantor of the popular will of the people.
According to the paper Corriere della sera, Berlusconi
himself reacted by raising the possibility of new elections. When
things remain as they are, then it is better to turn to the ballot
box, he reportedly declared. He proposed that the council
of ministers prepare parliamentary elections parallel to planned
European elections in Junea proposal that was greeted with
incredulity given that Berlusconis standing in the opinion
polls has hit rock bottom. Another alternative under discussion
is a speedy change to the constitution. That, however, would require
winning votes from the ranks of the opposition.
For his part, the president of the National Association of
Judges (ANM), Edmondo Bruti Liberati, praised the constitutional
courts ruling. It showed that the Milan judges involved
in the court case against Berlusconi, who had been accused
of a rebellion against parliament, were in fact only doing
their duty, he said. The Milan state attorney, Armando Spataro,
declared: One of these vengeance laws has been cancelled
and now the same thing must happen to the other laws that have
turned Italy into a third-world country.
Parallel to the judicial review of the amnesty law, a popular
referendum against the law had also been sought. Last year, Senator
Antonio Di Pietro gathered a million signatures to this end. After
the court decision, he acknowledged that such a referendum was
no longer necessary.
At the start of the 1990s, Di Pietro, in his capacity as state
attorney, had played a leading role in the Mani Pulite
(clean hands) anti-corruption campaign that led to the prosecution
of hundreds of politicians and business executives. At that time,
previously existing amnesty laws covering politicians were struck
from the constitution.
Berlusconi and his closest collaborators were involved in dozens
of these cases. Amongst the accusations levelled against Berlusconi
were tax evasion, bribery of judges, accounting fraud and keeping
secret accounts. On three occasions, he was sentenced to a total
of six years in jail. In each case, however, the sentence was
not implementedeither because the statute of limitations
had elapsed or because of a change in the law.
In the spring of 2003, Berlusconis lawyer and confidante
Cesare Previti was sentenced to 11 years in jail on the charge
of bribing judges. He was found guilty of bribing investigatory
judges in Rome in the early nineties in order to facilitate a
takeover of the Mondadori publishing house by Berlusconis
company, Fininvest.
A few weeks later, Previti, a former defence minister, was
once again found guilty of bribery and sentenced to five years
in jailthis time in a court case where Berlusconi himself
was a defendant. The Rome judge who had accepted the bribes, Renato
Squillante, was sentenced to eight years and four months. This
time the bribery was part of a deal for the takeover of the food
concern SME. The court concluded that in 1991 Squillante accepted
$434,000 from Fininvest and in return annulled the sale of the
state-owned SME to Berlusconis rival, De Benedetti, allowing
Berlusconi to buy the concern.
Previti, who is appealing his convictions, has worked with
Berlusconi from the early days. His grandfather was a business
executive in Berlusconis first construction company in Milan.
His son is a member of Forza Italia. In the judgement against
Previti, the Milan judges accused Berlusconis Fininvest
company of being guilty of corruption without parallel in
Italian history and perhaps in the whole world.
Pressure on Berlusconi grows
Berlusconi confronts other serious problems besides the threatened
reopening of the SME trials.
In December, Italian state president Carlo Azeglio Ciampi refused
to sign a new media law that had been pushed through parliament
by the government majority. He sent the so-called Gasparri law
back to parliament because it violated existing anti-trust laws
and benefited in an entirely one-sided manner the Berlusconi companiesFininvest
and Mediaset.
The media law was originally designed to resolve the conflict
of interest arising from the fact that Berlusconi was head of
government and at the same time Italys biggest media mogul.
The legislation was ultimately crafted as a means not only to
confirm Berlusconis monopoly of Italian private television,
but also to allow him to expand his control through the acquisition
of a newspaper empiresomething previously barred by law.
Investigations have also been going on since the start of the
year into the case of the Parmalat companythe largest corporate
bankruptcy fraud in Italian history. The family concern headed
by the food magnate Calisto Tanzi had developed over a short period
of time into a global player with revenues in the billions. At
the same time, the company acquired massive debts that it covered
up through the crudest forms of accounting fraud.
As a result, a conflict has emerged between the Italian state
bank and the government over how to reform controls over the financial
markets. Any effective control and investigation of the financial
practices of big companies would have to target Berlusconi himself,
who is known to have built up his own Fininvest company with dubious
methods similar to those employed by Parmalat.
Berlusconi is the richest man in Italy: his Fininvest empire
includes Mediaset, the countrys biggest TV, film and media
concern, as well as construction, insurance and food companies,
and retail store chains. There is substantial evidence suggesting
that Berlusconi entered politics as a means of solving the economic
and judicial problems confronting his network of companies. At
the beginning of the 1990s, he was around 1.3 billion euros in
debt and faced a host of court cases. At the same time, his existing
political protection was threatened by the Mani Pulite
campaign. His entry into politics enabled him to alter completely
the judicial and economic framework for himself and other members
of the Italian financial elite.
Since taking office, he has worked systematically to change
the laws governing corporate corruption. As a result, for example,
cooking the books is no longer recognised as a serious crime and
the statute of limitations for white-collar crime was severely
cut. In addition, the law governing international judicial cooperation
was altered to restrict the use of cross-border evidence. The
transparent aim of this change was to block an investigation into
allegations that Berlusconi and his business associates used a
$20 million slush fund illegally deposited in secret Swiss accounts
to bribe judges. Many of the legal changes made to benefit Berlusconi
were subsequently exploited by the head of Parmalat.
Additional changes to the law enable defendants to demand a
change of venue on the grounds that judges are biased. This allows
the accused to shift cases to more sympathetic judges and to tie
up proceedings almost indefinitely. Finally, the inheritance tax
was abolished; laws against money laundering eased; and existing
regulations barring members of parliament from holding substantial
commercial interests lifted.
Berlusconi was able to push through these changes because of
the political impotence of the opposition. During its own five
years in power, the Olive-Tree alliance had discredited itself
with a series of measures directed against working people and
had nothing to offer in the way of a political alternative to
Berlusconi.
Nevertheless, there has been no let-up in the series of popular
protests against the governments policies. There were further
strikes and boycott campaigns in local and national public transport
in December and January. A 24-hour railway strike took place on
December 13, and bus drivers undertook spontaneous strike action
in Milan. The strike was supported by the rank-and-file Cobas
trade unionsresulting in numerous legal actions being taken
against strikers.
As a result of this pressure from below, considerable divisions
have emerged inside the government alliance of Forza Italia, the
neo-fascist National Alliance (lead by Gianfranco Fini), the separatist
Northern League (lead by Umberto Bossi) and a wing of the Christian
Democrats. Just a few days ago, Bossi openly threatened to leave
the coalition if there was no progress toward the decentralisation
of the Italian governmenta measure favoured by the Northern
League, which seeks increasing independence for the rich northern
province of the country. On a host of issuesthe recent Parmalat
scandal, the law governing the media, the privatisation of the
main Italian air company Alitalia, and pension reform plansBerlusconi
can no longer fully rely upon his right-wing coalition partners.
Berlusconi, however, is not one to give up without a fight.
He still has the backing of powerful Italian and European capitalist
concerns. As the British Financial Times commented on January
14: It raises the question of whether the ruling four-party
coalition, often divided over important policies, can summon the
willpower to fight back, or whether the accumulating problems
will bury the premiership on which Mr Berlusconi set out with
such high hopes in the summer of 2001.
And the Swiss Berner Zeitung wrote: After the
judgement by the constitutional court must Berlusconi even contemplate
going to prison? No, the duel between the judiciary and the head
of government has not been put to a stop by the withdrawal of
immunity, instead it merely ushers in a new even more bitter round
in this struggle for power.
See Also:
The Parmalat scandal: Europes ten-billion
euro black hole
[6 January 2004]
Italy: Berlusconi
intensifies his attacks on the judiciary
[19 September 2003]
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