Italian minister resigns in blow to Berlusconi

July 5 (Reuters) – A former executive in Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s media empire who was unexpectedly appointed as a government minister last month resigned in the midst of an embezzlement trial on Monday.

The sudden departure of Aldo Brancher, named as “minister for federalism” in June, deals a fresh blow to Berlusconi whose centre-right government is facing crippling internal divisions that could put its future at risk.

“I am announcing my irrevocable decision to resign as government minister,” Brancher told a Milan court.

Brancher’s appointment as minister with responsibility for overseeing moves to give Italy’s regions more autonomy in matters including tax, education and health services had been heavily criticised by the opposition.

He caused further outrage when he used his newly acquired status as minister to claim immunity from his embezzlement trial and was forced to retreat and drop the claim only days later. (Reporting by Silvia Molteni; Writing by James Mackenzie)

EU works on mechanism to stop Greek crisis spreading

European Union officials were working out the details of a financial support mechanism on Saturday to prevent Greece’s debt turmoil spreading to Portugal and Spain, ready for approval by EU finance ministers on Sunday.

The leaders of the 16 countries that use the single currency said on Friday after talks with the European Central Bank and the executive European Commission that they would take whatever steps were needed to protect the stability of the euro area.

Both Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and French President Nicolas Sarkozy cancelled trips to Moscow to mark the anniversary of the end of World War Two in order to continue consultations over the crisis, though German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she would still go.

Financial markets have been pounding euro zone countries with high deficits or debts as well as low economic growth, threatening to force Portugal, Spain and Ireland into a position where, like Greece, they would need to seek financial aid.

The euro zone leaders, who have been accused of heightening market uncertainty with a lack of action, agreed to accelerate budget cuts and ensure deficit targets are met this year.

But they also decided, under pressure from the markets, to ask all 27 EU countries to agree a financial mechanism to ring-fence the Greek crisis before markets open on Monday.

“WORST CRISIS”

“The euro zone is going through the worst crisis since its creation,” Sarkozy said after Friday’s euro zone summit in Brussels.

“The leaders have decided to put in place a European intervention mechanism to preserve the stability of the euro zone. The decisions taken will have immediate application, from the point that financial markets open on Monday morning.”

“If the domino effect begins, no economy is safe,” Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen told the Finnish broadcaster YLE on Saturday.

Euro zone sources said late on Friday that the mechanism could be funded by bonds issued by the European Commission with guarantees from euro zone states.

No details have been disclosed so far, but the sources said EU law provided a legal basis for such a mechanism.

The treaty governing the EU says that if a member of the 27-nation bloc is in difficulties caused by circumstances beyond its control, EU ministers may grant it financial assistance.

“Two mechanisms have been agreed — one based on article 122.2 of the Treaty saying the council can help a member state with serious difficulties,” one of the sources said.

“The other will enable the European Commission to go on the markets and get money with an explicit guarantee of the member states and an implicit guarantee of the ECB (European Central Bank,” the source added.

A second source said: “The details of this mechanism will be agreed by Sunday and the idea is to trigger both on Sunday.”

EMERGENCY LOANS

Friday’s EU summit approved $110 billion euros ($147 billion) in emergency EU/IMF loans to Greece over three years to help it over a budget crisis in exchange for austerity measures so sharp that they have already sparked violent protest.

There was some sign that popular anger might be subsiding as a new survey indicated that more than half of Greeks would rather back the EU/IMF deal than risk bankruptcy by going it alone, and were willing to make more sacrifices.

But fears that the loans might not be enough to prevent a Greek default and avert a broader economic crisis kept world stocks near a three-month low, despite strong U.S. jobs data.

Group of Seven finance ministers discussed the situation in a conference call on Friday after U.S. Federal Reserve officials expressed concern, and agreed to monitor the markets.

Earlier on Friday, the German parliament approved its share of the rescue, the largest contribution by a euro zone country.

But five German academics filed a legal challenge, reflecting widespread German public opposition, arguing that the aid was not provided for under EU treaties, and would give rise to inflationary policies.

Germany’s highest court on Saturday rejected their request to block the immediate release of a German loan.

Merkel, who initially resisted agreeing to Greek aid due to the opposition at home, told voters in a regional election that euro zone countries would “lead this fight for the stability of the euro together and with resolve”.

She said this did not only mean financial discipline.

“Those who created the excesses on the markets will be asked to pay up — those are in part the banks, those are the hedge funds that must be regulated … those are the short-sellers and we agreed yesterday to implement this more quickly in Europe.”

Silvio Berlusconi ‘agrees to divorce’ second wife

London, May 10 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, has reportedly agreed on a divorce settlement with his second wife/actress Veronica Lario.

According to reports, Lairo will receive “considerably less” than the 3.5 million Euros a month, she had demanded as maintenance.

Instead, Berlusconi, 73, has offered her up to 300,000 euros a month.

Also, she is likely to retain Villa Belvedere, her mansion at Macherio near Milan.

Legal sources revealed that the estranged couple, had “coldly shaken hands” after nearly five hours of talks at the Milan courthouse.

Nonetheless, they added that the outcome had been “satisfactory”.

Lario blamed the leader, who has been linked to different women in the past, for the split, reports the Times.

Meanwhile, Berlusconi’s aides suggested Lairo had an affair with a bodyguard.

Lario’s staff, however, denied the allegation.

The two have been married for twenty years and have three children together. (ANI)

EU works on mechanism to stop Greek crisis spreading

European Union officials were working out the details of a financial support mechanism on Saturday to prevent Greece’s debt turmoil spreading to Portugal and Spain, ready for approval by EU finance ministers on Sunday.

The leaders of the 16 countries that use the single currency said on Friday after talks with the European Central Bank and the executive European Commission that they would take whatever steps were needed to protect the stability of the euro area.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi cancelled a trip to Russia on Saturday to continue consultations with EU leaders over the crisis, a government source said.

Financial markets have been pounding euro zone countries with high deficits or debts as well as low economic growth, threatening to force Portugal, Spain and Ireland into a position where, like Greece, they would need to seek financial aid.

The euro zone leaders, who have been accused of heightening market uncertainty with a lack of action, agreed to accelerate budget cuts and ensure deficit targets are met this year.

But they also decided, under pressure from the markets, to ask all 27 EU countries to agree a financial mechanism to ring-fence the Greek crisis before markets open on Monday.

“WORST CRISIS”

“The euro zone is going through the worst crisis since its creation,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said after Friday’s euro zone summit in Brussels.

“The leaders have decided to put in place a European intervention mechanism to preserve the stability of the euro zone. The decisions taken will have immediate application, from the point that financial markets open on Monday morning.”

“If the domino effect begins, no economy is safe,” Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen told the Finnish broadcaster YLE on Saturday.

Euro zone sources said late on Friday that the mechanism could be funded by bonds issued by the European Commission with guarantees from euro zone states.

No details have been disclosed so far, but the sources said EU law provided a legal basis for such a mechanism.

The treaty governing the European Union says that if a member of the 27-nation bloc is in difficulties caused by circumstances beyond its control, EU ministers may, under certain conditions, grant it financial assistance.

“Two mechanisms have been agreed — one based on article 122.2 of the Treaty saying the council can help a member state with serious difficulties,” one of the sources said.

“The other will enable the European Commission to go on the markets and get money with an explicit guarantee of the member states and an implicit guarantee of the ECB (European Central Bank,” the source added.

A second source said: “The details of this mechanism will be agreed by Sunday and the idea is to trigger both on Sunday.”

EMERGENCY LOANS

Friday’s EU summit approved $110 billion euros ($147 billion) in emergency EU/IMF loans to Greece over three years to help it over a budget crisis in exchange for austerity measures so sharp that they have already sparked violent protest.

But fears that the loans might not be enough to prevent a Greek default and avert a broader economic crisis kept world stocks near a three-month low, despite strong U.S. jobs data.

Group of Seven finance ministers discussed the situation in a conference call on Friday after U.S. Federal Reserve officials expressed concern, and agreed to monitor the markets.

Earlier on Friday, the German parliament approved its share of the Greek rescue, the largest contribution by a euro zone country. The Dutch parliament also approved its part of the deal and Italy’s cabinet has given initial approval.

But five German academics filed a legal challenge, reflecting widespread German public opposition to the measure.

Germany’s highest court on Saturday rejected their request to block the immediate release of a German loan to Greece, which the academics argued was not provided for under EU treaties and would give rise to inflationary policies.

A group of elder statesmen said in a report on Saturday that the EU was at a critical point in its existence and would struggle for influence in 20 years’ time unless it found unity and firm leadership, especially in the economic area.

“Strengthening economic governance in the EU is urgently needed if we are to avoid the asymmetric shocks which derive from the co-existence of our monetary union and single market with divergent economic policies,” said the 35-page report by the Reflection Group, 12 political and business leaders asked to analyse the future challenges faced by the EU.

(Writing by Kevin Liffey; editing by Myra MacDonald)

Berlusconi’s media empire in Miss France ”bikini” row

London, May 8 (ANI): Italian prime minister and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi’s empire is embroiled in a row with Miss France’s self-styled moral guardian Genevieve de Fontenay, 77, over wearing bikinis in the beauty pageant.

De Fontenay has accused Endemol France, the Berlusconi-owned group which brought reality TV to France, of turning Miss France into trash.

“Those (girls) who like opening their legs will be with Endemol and those with a bit of class will stay by my side,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

In fact, several former Miss France laureates were pitted against each other and both camps claim to have majority support.

In the eyes of La France Profonde, de Fontenay has been instrumental in keeping rampant feminism at bay while maintaining decorum.

On the other hand, Berlusconi”s media group is not averse to healthy doses of on-screen bare flesh.

Endemol bought the rights off de Fontenay for the Miss France label in 2002 for 10 million euros, promising not to lower the tone and to pay her a monthly 5,000-euro fee to oversee the pageant until the end of this year.

However, she was ruffled when Endemol ordered contestants to wear their hair down, rather than in a bun, and don bikinis rather than swimsuits in the final.

But the last straw was when a French magazine published lewd photographs of Kelly Bochenko, a Miss France contestant, in poses de Fontenay described as “gynaecological”.

This broke her cardinal rule that her “girls” should never take their clothes off in public.

The last Miss France to do that, Valerie Begue, was stripped of her crown.

Endemol then sealed the rift in her view by inviting Bochenko to participate in its reality TV show, ‘Celebrity Farm’.

De Fontenay raged at Endemol executives for an hour telling them they had “adulterated” the spirit of Miss France before storming out and announcing that she was starting a rival pageant that respects her moral and dress codes.

Endemol hit back via Sylvie Tellier, director general of its Miss France organisation who won the contest herself in 2002.

“Mme de Fontenay no longer represents Miss France nor can she claim the Miss France label. She must stay away from this year”s winner and cannot turn up to contests,” she said.

She warned that regional committees, had until May 10 to swear allegiance to Endemol or lose the use of the Miss France brand, and any accompanying TV rights.

Endemol claims that already 14 out of the 37 regions are on its side.

Others have come out in favour of Mrs de Fontenay, including the powerful Western France region. (ANI)

Berlusconi showers teen model pal with mystery gift on 19th b’day

London, May 7 (ANI): Aspiring lingerie model Noemi Letizia whose friendship with Silvio Berlusconi came close to ruining his political career along with his marriage is still in contact with the Italian Prime Minister.

Letizia came in the limelight after Berlusconi attended her 18th birthday party a year ago in the Naples suburb of Casoria. He gave Letizia — who said she called him “Papi” — a 5,087-pound gold and diamond necklace. Later news reports came in claiming that at the age of 17 she had attended New Year celebrations at his villa in Sardinia with a girlfriend but without her parents.

And a year later, Letizia has celebrated her 19th birthday but declined to say what present she received from Berlusconi, reports The Times.

While talking about the place she celebrated her b’day, Letizia said that the venue was “for young people” and therefore not suitable for the Prime Minister, 73.

However, she told reporters that he had telephoned her to offer his congratulations. The call “at least let me know he was thinking of me”, she said. Asked what he had given her she replied: “Everyone is asking what it was. Let them remain in doubt.” (ANI)

Leonardo to learn fate as Milan renaissance falters

AC Milan coach Leonardo holds a news conference on Friday when the main topic of conversation will be his managerial future following fresh speculation he will leave at the end of the season.

The Brazilian, who succeeded Carlo Ancelotti last May when the Italian left for Chelsea, has stayed silent on the issue in order to concentrate on the Serie A run-in but chief executive Adriano Galliani has admitted the rookie may quit.

“He has three kids in Rio and sooner or later he will go back to Brazil,” Galliani told Sky TV this month.

Italian media speculated on Thursday that club owner Silvio Berlusconi had decided to sack Leonardo in any case after reports said the Italian prime minister had been overheard discussing Milan’s average season and possible new managers.

Assistant coach Filippo Galli is seen as favourite by bookmakers.

Milan have not commented on the speculation, just as they refused to confirm Ancelotti’s departure for Chelsea until the end of last season despite talks having gone on for months.

Most Rossoneri fans were underwhelmed by the appointment of former technical director Leonardo, seeing the move as a cheap way of finding a new coach amid general belt-tightening from Berlusconi which included the sale of Kaka and limited new buys.

Milan have not won the scudetto since 2004 and lie a distant third in Serie A with three matches to go, just four points above in-form Sampdoria who threaten to steal the third automatic Champions League spot.

Fiorentina visit the San Siro on Saturday in a tricky clash.

Milan’s campaign started badly and a pickup in form mid-season, highlighted by a win at Real Madrid, soon dropped off as they bowed out of Europe and injuries to the likes of Alexandre Pato and David Beckham hit their progress.

The sight of treble-chasing Inter Milan and coach Jose Mourinho dancing with delight in Barcelona on Wednesday having reached the Champions League final will also have brought home to Berlusconi how far his 2007 European Cup winners have fallen.

(Reporting by Mark Meadows; Editing by Ed Osmond; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Berlusconi accused of ‘sacrilege’ in communion row

London, Apr 22 (ANI): The Catholic church has accused Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of committing “sacrilege” by taking communion despite having divorced his first wife and being on the verge of second divorce.

The Roman Catholic Church prohibits divorcees who remarry from taking communion.

However, Berlusconi was accorded the privilege at the funeral of a well-known Italian television celebrity in Milan.

But, the leverage for the Italian premier has set off a heated debate between Catholic figures across Italy, with a priest in Genoa calling it a scandal.

“Berlusconi has committed sacrilege in the light of the fact that he is divorced and is in the process of getting divorced again,” the Telegraph quoted Father Paolo Farinella as saying.

He accused the Church of making one rule for the rich and famous and another for ordinary Catholics.

A former bishop from the southern region of Puglia, Monsignor Giuseppe Casale, said the 73-year-old premier should not be permitted to take communion because he had shown himself not to be “coherently Christian” with his behaviour.

The criticism was a veiled reference to the sex scandals, which engulfed the prime minister last summer. (ANI)

$1 billion in property seized from Mafia clan

Italian police have seized property including apartments and farms worth an estimated $1 billion from a powerful clan of the Camorra crime syndicate based in Naples.

Around 200 police officers swooped on property owned by the heirs of Dante Passarelli, a suspected Camorra chief.

Mr Passarelli fell to his death in mysterious circumstances while he was facing charges in a major anti-Mafia case in 2004.

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi launched a series of initiatives in January to tackle the Mafia, including a national agency to manage confiscated property.

A law passed by the Berlusconi government in 2008 allows seizures from the relatives of Mafia members.

Berlusconi struggles with apathy in regional vote

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on Monday risked defeat in regional elections that saw record abstention, with his Northern League allies set to win their first two regions and looking more like rivals.

Projections from partial results from the vote in 13 out of Italy’s 20 regions had Berlusconi winning four, the centre left winning six and tying with the right in Lazio (which includes Rome), and the League doing even better than expected at two.

The 73-year-old centre-right premier, two years into a third term ending in 2013, campaigned actively to avoid the low turnout that was seen in this month’s French regional elections, which proved damaging for President Nicolas Sarkozy.

He had also dismissed talk of internal rivalry with the anti-immigrant Northern League, which already has key cabinet posts and could now seek more power within the ruling coalition.

The League was poised to win Piedmont from the centre left as forecast but also to seize Veneto from Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PDL) party, according to projections with a quarter of votes counted.

All eyes were on Lazio, where bureaucratic bungling by the PDL excluded its list of candidates for Rome, and Berlusconi’s candidate Renata Polverini was neck-and-neck with centre-left former European Commissioner Emma Bonino.

DISGUST WITH POLITICS

Berlusconi seemed to have suffered from the low turnout, with just 64 percent of the 41 million people eligible voting versus about 72 percent in the last regional vote in 2005.

The premier’s spokesman, Paolo Bonaiuti, put a brave face on the partial results, saying victory in four regions “would mean we had doubled the number of regions versus five years ago”.

The centre left, trounced by Berlusconi in the national election in 2008, managed to hang on to its strongholds in central Italy by the skin of its teeth.

But the high level of abstention suggested disaffection with politics in general, according to analysts who cited candidates’ failure to address issues of most concern, like unemployment and the economic crisis, as well as the PDL’s bungling in Lazio and a recent corruption scandal involving a top Berlusconi aide.

“We are all a bit disgusted. I don’t have much of an opinion, but it’s clear they talked little about content and a lot about political infighting, which hasn’t pleased anyone,” said Rome voter Armando Rizzo.

After a turbulent 2009 for Berlusconi marked by a divorce, prostitution scandals and legal battles to keep him out of court on corruption charges, he is now being investigated for allegedly trying to shut down TV talk shows critical of him.

A poor result could tempt Berlusconi to spend his way back to favour. But his Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti enjoys the support of the League, whose gains could underpin his role as guardian of a strict line on spending that has stopped Italy’s fiscal position deteriorating as badly as its neighbours.

(Additional reporting by Gabriele Pileri and Ella Ide; editing by Dominic Evans)

Berlusconi draws flak for claming opponent”s looks ”ruin her day”

London, March 25 (ANI): Silvio Berlusconi and controversy have almost become synonymous – the Italian Premier has now come under fire for sneering at a female opposition politician”s looks at a campaign rally.

Berlusconi, 73, reportedly said Mercedes Bresso was “always in a bad mood” because she looked into the mirror to put on her make-up in the morning.

“So her day is already ruined,” the Telegraph quoted him, as saying in northern Turin.

Bresso, 65, got even with Berlusconi, by suggesting she was doing much better than the Italian Prime Minister, who had a hair transplant and plastic surgery and is believed to wear foundation to appear tanned.

She said: “I”m better preserved than him, even without plastic surgery.

“As far as make-up is concerned, I don”t use much. I need it less than Berlusconi.”

Bresso, the centre-left Democratic Party”s candidate for governor in the northern Piedmont region, is up against Roberto Cota, a member of the anti-immigration Northern League supported by Berlusconi”s People of Freedom party, in the polls on Sunday and Monday. (ANI)

Number of asylum seekers in West stable, belies myth – U.N.

The number of people seeking asylum in the West last year remained stable, shattering the myth that there is a flood of people trying to reach rich countries, the United Nations refugee agency said on Tuesday.

Some 377,200 people claiming to flee conflict or persecution applied for asylum in 2009, only 100 more than the previous year, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said.

“The notion that there is a flood of asylum seekers into richer countries is a myth,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres said in a statement.

“Despite what some populists claim, our data shows that the numbers have remained stable,” added the former Portuguese prime minister who heads the Geneva-based agency.

The annual report covers 44 industrialised countries including the 27 European Union (EU) member states, Australia, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States.

It found significant disparities at regional and country level, but had no information on percentages of claims accepted.

The EU registered the bulk of claims with 246,200 last year, a 3 percent rise from 2008, the UNHCR said. Increases were highest in the 12 “new” EU member states which are mostly in central and eastern Europe.

The Nordic region recorded a 13 percent increase in applications with 51,100 requests, the highest in six years.

But in eight countries of southern Europe, applications fell significantly, driven by a 42 percent decline in Italy. Asylum seekers may be taking other routes to northern Europe, spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.

Asylum and immigration are a sensitive issue in many EU countries, such as Italy and Greece, which say they cannot cope with hundreds of thousands of people arriving as potential illegal migrants, often on rickety boats.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s centre right government last year approved tough legislation making it a felony to be an illegal immigrant or to help one. Italy also extended the period of time illegal immigrants can be detained from two to six months.

AFGHANS TOP LIST

For the first time since 2001, Afghans topped the list of applicants in industrialised countries with 26,800 requests, up 45 percent from the previous year, the UNHCR said. Afghans now make up 7 percent of all asylum applicants in the West.

“Ongoing violence in Afghanistan is driving Afghans from their homes and more are seeking asylum in industrialised countries,” Fleming told a news briefing.

“But we cannot forget that the vast majority of refugees are hosted in developing countries. There are 1.7 million registered Afghan refugees in Pakistan and 1 million in Iran,” she added.

Iraqis fell to second place with 24,000 claims in the West, a 40 percent drop, followed by Somalis with 22,600 applications.

Russian asylum seekers were fourth, stable at 20,400, but Chinese asylum seekers rose to 20,100, the highest since 2004.

For the fourth year running, the United States was the main destination country, with 49,000 or 13 percent of all claims lodged, UNHCR said. Almost a third were from Chinese applicants.

France, in second place with 42,000 applications, saw a 19 percent increase, mainly due to rising claims from citizens of Serbia originating mainly from Kosovo, it said.

Canada, in third place, saw applications drop by 10 percent to 33,000 after a fall in claims from Mexicans and Haitians.

Fourth-place Britain received 29,800 applications, a 5 percent drop from 2008 and “one of the lowest in 15 years”, the UNHCR said. Germany was fifth with 27,600 claims.

Berlusconi to push for ‘greater powers’ by changes to Italian constitution

Rome (Italy), Mar 22(ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has said that he will push for changes in the constitution by referendum to give him greater powers as a “directly elected president”.

Addressing supporters of his People of Liberty party at a rally in Rome, Berlusconi said that he has planned a “great, great, great reform” in the remaining three years of his term.

The Prime Minister is calling for changes to the judiciary, which he claims is biased against him, a cut in the number of Members of Parliament (MPs) and direct elections for a head of state with expanded powers.

Talking about the investigation being carried out by Magistrates over tapped phone conversations indicating that he had tried to block his critics from appearing on TV shows, Berlusconi said the “leftist” judges and politicians had concocted “a laughable investigation based on the calls.

“We don’t often take to the streets, but it was absolutely necessary to defend ourselves from the attacks of the Left and its magistrates,” The Times quoted Berlusconi, as saying.

“We are here to have our right to vote guaranteed. With you, love and freedom will win,” he added. (ANI)

Businessman who supplied women for Berlusconi’s parties arrested

London, Sept 19 (ANI): Giampaolo Tarantini, the businessman who claims to have supplied Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, with a stream of women for parties, has been arrested at Bari airport in southern Italy.

Antonio Laudati, the chief prosecutor in Bari, said Tarantini had been arrested at Bari airport for “dealing in drugs” and in case he tried to flee the country.

Tarantini was under investigation for allegedly “abetting prostitution” by paying Italian and foreign women to go to Berlusconi’s villas.

There was also a “strong risk” that he would “tamper with evidence”, Laudati said.

Nico D’Ascola, Tarantini’s lawyer, confirmed the arrest, reports The Times.

Tarantini is also being investigated for allegedly supplying prostitutes to centre-Left politicians in Bari and the Apulia region in connection with alleged corruption over contracts to supply health equipment to the region’s hospitals.

Tarantini has admitted to Bari prosecutors that he supplied 30 women for 18 parties hosted by Berlusconi.

He told investigators: “To this end I incurred considerable expense to enter into his confidence. Knowing of his interest in the female sex, I brought him girls who I presented as my friends – keeping quiet about the fact that I had paid them.”

Tarantini added that he wanted to “establish a network in the public administration because I thought that these days girls and cocaine were the key to access and success in society”. (ANI)

‘Berlusconi will have to resign if immunity law overturned’

Rome, Sep. 18 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi would be forced to resign if laws providing him immunity are overturned by the Constitutional Court next month, his lawyers have admitted.

“If the Constitutional Court, which begins its deliberations on October 6, overturns the law there would be damage to the functions of an elected official, which could not be carried out”, Times Online quoted Glauco Nori, a state lawyer for the prime minister’s office, as saying.

The move could cause “irreparable damage” and lead to the Prime Minister’s resignation, he added.

After coming to power for the third time in 2008, Berlusconi pushed the law through Parliament, which gives immunity to the offices of Prime Minister, President and the Speakers of both houses of parliament from court trials, which was dubbed

As being “tailor-made” to shield Berlusconi from corruption charges, by the opposition, the report said.

At the time when legislation was passed, Berlusconi was being prosecuted for allegedly giving a 600,000-dollar bribe to British lawyer David Mills to provide false testimony on his behalf in corruption trials in the 1990s, it added.

Berlusconi’s trial was suspended but Mills was sentenced to 41/2 years in jail.

According to the report, the Milan prosecutor’s office had recently submitted its own memorandum to the court, challenging the immunity law as violating the principle that all citizens are equal before the law.

If the immunity law is struck off next month, corruption charges against Berlusconi are likely to be revived.

According to reports, magistrates in Milan and Palermo are also investigating Berlusconi’s suspected links to the Mafia in the 1990s. (ANI)

Now, Berlusconi says most Italians want to be like him

London, Sept 8 (ANI): After describing himself as “Superman”, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has said: “Most Italians want to be like me.”

The controversial 72-year-old premier, who has repeatedly denied allegations of inappropriate relationships with young women, insisted during a television interview: “Most Italians would like to be like me and they support my behaviour.

“Italian aren’t stupid, as the Left thinks, and they prefer my government.

“Just look at the polls, we have an approval rating sailing towards 70 per cent”.

The premier’s personal life came under media glare after news of him attending birthday of Noemi Letizia, 18, a model, erupted, reports The Telegraph.

However, he has insisted that “nothing spicy” happened between him and Letizia.

He has also said he cannot remember the escort Patrizia D’Addario, 42, spending the night at his official Palazzo Grazioli residence in Rome.

Last week Berlusconi described himself as “Superman”.(ANI)

Berlusconi declares himself “Superman”

London, Sept 3 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has declared himself a “Superman”.

While praising his achievements in office and replying back to his critics and estranged wife, Veronica Lario, the 72-year-old said: “I’m not ill.

“You only have to look at what I’ve achieved over the last 15 months in government to see that not only am I not in poor health, I’m Superman.”

In May, Lario had announced that she wanted a divorce from the premier after accusing him of being “not well” and obsessed with young women, reports The Telegraph.

She was apparently furious over his attendance at the 18th birthday party of an aspiring lingerie model, Noemi Letizia.

Later an escort, Patrizia D’Addario, claimed that she and another prostitute had sexual intercourse with the prime minister at his official residence in Rome following a private party. (ANI)

Berlusconi helped Israeli model get noticed in Israel

Washington, Sep 1 (ANI): Israeli-born model/TV presenter Moran Atias has revealed that she was first noticed in Israel after Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi introduced her to then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

“A reporter was covering a meeting between then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Silvio Berlusconi,” Maxim magazine quoted her as saying.

“Berlusconi told the reporter in the middle of the interview, ‘We have a wonderful Israeli girl working on our television.’

“Ariel Sharon had no idea what he was talking about. An Israeli making it in Italian cinema and speaking fluent Italian is like someone walking on the moon,” she said.

Asked whether Berlusconi ever made a pass at her, Atias said that she knew about the way he helped other girls.

“No, but he’s such a charismatic man, Look, it’s not new that he’s always had several girls that he’s been… helping. That’s a party of Italy I don’t really like,” she added. (ANI)

Berlusconi’s paper rubbishes Britain

London, July 14 (ANI): A newspaper owned by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has severely criticized Britain by saying the country is in a sorry state of decline and overshadowed at every turn by Italy.

The verdict of the Il Giornale was published under the headline: “Dear Brits, we’ve beaten you at everything and it’s time you realised it.”

The Italian attack on all things British comes in the wake of Berlusconi’s claim that reports of his sexually charged antics have been fabricated as part of an elaborate British plot, The Times reports.

“We’re talking about the country that many people still consider to be a beacon of journalism, politics, economics and sport. But Great Britain is no longer great,” the paper wrote.

On Monday, Italy’s Opposition MPs demanded that Berlusconi appear before Parliament to explain allegations of escort girls at his parties.

His supporters blame the allegations on a conspiracy between the Italian Left and the foreign media.

In a front-page editorial, Il Giornale attacked Britain’s political management and handling of the economic crisis.

The report went on to compare British industry, crime rates, immigration, fashion, tourism and the media unfavourably with Italy’s.

It said that the British press – including newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch, the chairman and chief executive of News Corporation, the parent company of The Times – had lost its reputation by fabricating stories, including predictions of chaos at the G8 summit.

“They have super-rich teams with champion players, but their most famous players are nearly all foreign and the national team has been in deep water for several years now. Things are so bad that they had to entrust the team to Fabio Capello, Italian miracle worker,” the write-up even mentioned Premier League football to support its claim. (ANI)