Europe |
Berlusconi loses crucial majority in parliament |
2011-11-09 |
[Dawn] ![]() ...current Italian prime minister, known for his plain (for a European politician) speaking and his liking for hookers a third his age or less... 's future hung by a thread on Tuesday after the embattled leader was hit by a rash of defections in parliament that put his ruling coalition in a minority. A vote on Italia's 2010 public accounts, a precondition for the approval of future budgets, was passed by 308 votes in favour and none against with one formal abstention but 321 deputies refused to take part in the vote. The absolute majority in Italia's 630-seat parliament is 316 votes. A sombre Berlusconi could be seen in parliament immediately after the vote consulting a list of votes cast and he later left for his office nearby. The result leaves Berlusconi's centre-right coalition effectively with no mandate to pass the ambitious reforms needed to rescue Italia's finances. Borrowing rates hit new records after the vote indicating investor fears, with the yield on 10-year bonds reaching 6.7 per cent and the spread between Italian and German benchmark bond yields widening to a new high of 4.9 per cent. "The government no longer has a majority in this chamber," Pier Luigi Bersani, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, said after the vote. Addressing Berlusconi, he added: "Hand in your resignation.""We have a problem with credibility with this government. This government is no longer able to face the situation and confront it," he said. The premier's main coalition partner had called for his resignation ahead of the vote, with a nervous Europe watching on as political consultations also continued in crisis-hit Greece over the formation of a new cabinet. "We have asked him to step aside," Northern League party leader Umberto Bossi, a long-term ally of Berlusconi from the early 1990s, told news hounds. Global markets were focused on the political crisis playing out in Italia, the third-biggest economy in the eurozone, while European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... ministers held talks in Brussels in which they voiced concern about the situation. "We're in the eye of the global storm... Italia needs international credibility," business daily Il Sole 24 Ore said in an editorial. In Brussels, Austria warned Italia was too big to bail out, saying it could not rely on "help from outside" because of the size of its economy. Britannia and Sweden meanwhile led calls by non-euro EU members for eurozone countries to move fast with a convincing firewall to stop crisis contagion. Finland said the Italian government should stop making "empty promises". The combination of Italia's low growth rate and 1.9-trillion euro ($2.6-trillion) debt has fanned investor alarm that it could be the next victim of Europe's debt crisis even though its deficit is relatively low. A defiant Berlusconi on Monday dismissed talk of his possible resignation as "baseless" and warned against calls for the creation of a unity government to fight the crisis, saying it would be "the opposite of democracy." Although the current political picture in Italia is far from clear, the idea that Berlusconi, a dominant feature in Italian politics for almost two decades, could step down is no longer taboo, including among his supporters. |
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Europe |
Italian gov't on brink of collapse |
2011-10-26 |
[Financial Times] Italia's prime minister was fighting on Tuesday night to stave off a collapse of his centre-right coalition government over European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... demands for more concrete economic reform measures in time for Wednesday's highly anticipated summit of eurozone leaders. The demand came as European officials attempted to reach a final agreement on giving the eurozone's 440bn rescue fund more firepower so that it can assist Italia by purchasing Italian bonds, lowering Rome's borrowing rates, which are near 6 per cent. While such EU assistance falls well short of a full-scale Italian bail-out, senior European officials said it would come with tough new conditions, and that the demands on Silvio Berlusconi ...current Italian prime minister, known for his plain (for a European politician) speaking and his liking for hookers a third his age or less... were the beginning of a more intrusive effort by Italia's eurozone partners to ensure Rome convinces the financial markets it is sincere about fiscal reforms. Talks early on Tuesday between Mr Berlusconi and his Northern League coalition partners failed to resolve the deadlock -- centred on proposed pension reforms -- after inconclusive negotiations the night before. "The government is at risk," Umberto Bossi, leader of the fiercely eurosceptic and federalist Northern League, told news hounds in Rome. "The situation is difficult, very dangerous. This is a dramatic moment," he said, warning of possible snap elections. But Angelino Alfano, secretary of Mr Berlusconi's People of Liberty party, said on Tuesday night that an agreement on reform measures had been reached with the Northern League that would hold the coalition together and assure economic growth. Details were not immedietaly available. Any Italian compromise that promises future action could be hard to swallow for eurozone leaders seeking a comprehensive solution to the sovereign debt crisis at the Brussels summit, their second in four days. The European Central Bank, which has been propping up Italian debt on the markets since early August, received similar commitments in the past. Mr Berlusconi's difficulties mirrored tough pre-summit negotiations in other European capitals, where leaders were struggling to finalise the overhaul of the rescue fund and strike a deal with Greek bondholders that would allow them to lower the amount of government bail-out aid to Athens. |
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Europe |
Rome Sends In Bully Boys To Bust Up A Northern League Banquet, Again |
2011-07-03 |
The Brown bear burgers and kebabs were part of the menu on offer at the rally held by the Northern League, key allies of Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister. Armed officers stormed into the venue at Imer near Trento after they heard how 50kg of bear meat was due to be cooked. Hunting bear is banned in Italy and the meat had been imported from neighbouring Slovenia. There was tension as the meat was seized from refrigerators with police saying that ''documentation'' was not in order and so the meat could not be eaten. Furious members of the Northern League booed and jeered as the packets were collected and taken away and menus had the words bear scrawled out as the event continued. Posters for the event had openly advertised the fact bear meat - which is seen as a delicacy in north east Italy - was on the menu and recipes have been handed down from generation to generation. Enzo Erminio Boso, a Northern League senator, told the 200 strong crowd:''We have been told that he documentation is not in order to eat the bear meat and this is an order that has come direct from Rome. ''On Monday I will be calling Umberto Bossi (Northern League party leader) and telling him that we should leave the ruling coalition immediately. The paperwork is in order and this is an attempt to stop our traditions.'' In Italy bears are a protected species due to their dwindling numbers and the police intervention was welcomed by conservation groups. This is likely an effort by some opponents of Berlusconi in the government to break up his coalition. The left in Rome has long hated the North, and tried to use it as a cash cow to feed southern socialism. |
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Europe |
Italy ready to forcibly return Tunisians if Europe won't help |
2011-03-31 |
Italy will forcibly return thousands of Tunisian illegal immigrants unless other European countries accept them as the situation reaches breaking point. In recent weeks more than 18,000 immigrants have arrived on the tiny rocky island of Lampedusa, pushing resources to the limit. Many of them have been moved by ship to holding areas on the mainland but there the migrants climb over flimsy fences and escape. Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini today launched a stinging attack on Europe and France in particular. He said: 'They must be repatriated or distributed around other European countries. There has been a flagrant lack of solidarity from Italy's European neighbours, who have failed to help starting with France.' Relations between Rome and Paris have been tense since the start of the allied no fly zone as Italy had wanted NATO to take immediate command while France first opposed the idea and then dragged out the discussions. Italy also felt left out after it emerged that America, Britain, Germany and France had discussed plans for Libya's future in a video conference without being invited. Frattini added that 'forced repatriation is an extreme measure but it cannot be excluded' - the solution being urged by fellow ruling right wing coalition anti-immigrant Northern League. That party's leader, Umberto Bossi, who had once suggested the navy should shell boats carrying immigrants, simply said: 'They should all f*** off home.' Earlier this week, Berlusconi told a cheering crowd on Lampedusa that he would clear the island within '60 hours' and that he had even bought a home there to show solidarity. |
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Europe |
Protest in Rome against blasphemy law |
2011-01-27 |
[Pak Daily Times] ROME: Italian politicians and religious associations protested here on Wednesday against Pakistain's blasphemy law, calling for the release of a Christian woman sentenced to death under the legislation. Catholic and Jewish associations joined human rights ... which are not the same thing as individual rights, mind you... group Umberto Bossi, head of Italy's anti-immigrant and populist Northern League Party and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's partner in the centre-right coalition, attended Wednesday's protest here. "We want to express our solidarity," he told journalists. A delegation from the protest also met Foreign Minister Franco Frattini. Last Thursday the European parliament urged President Asif Ali President Ten PercentZardari ... husband of the late Benazir Bhutto, who showed remarkably little curiosity about who actually done her in ... to pardon and release Aasia following calls from several countries, international organisations and an appeal by Pope Benedict XVI. European parliamentarians also called on the Pak government to revise their blasphemy law and its application. Their request followed the January 4 liquidation of former Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer, who was rubbed out by his bodyguard after calling for reform of the blasphemy law used to sentence Aasia to death. |
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Europe |
Cries of 'Duce! Duce!' salute Rome's new mayor |
2008-04-29 |
Italy's new parliament met for the first time today with applause for Rome's mayor-elect, Gianni Alemanno, a day after followers celebrated his triumph with straight-arm salutes and fascist-era chants. Alemanno, a former neo-fascist youth leader, took 54% of the vote in a run-off on Sunday and Monday, crushing his rival, Francesco Rutelli, a deputy prime minister in the last, centre-left government. Silvio Berlusconi, who won a general election earlier this month, welcomed the latest evidence of Italy's leap to the right by declaring: "We are the new Falange". Although he took care to wrap his remark in a classical context, his choice of words appeared to be a nod and a wink to his most extreme supporters. The original Falange the word means "phalanx" was the Spanish fascist party, founded in the 1930s, which supplied Francisco Franco's dictatorship with its ideological underpinning. The prime minister-elect's closest ally, Umberto Bossi, the Northern League leader, kept up the intimidating rhetoric, arriving for the first session of Italy's parliament warning of violence if the centre-left did not go along with his plans for federalism. "I don't know what the left wants [but] we are ready," he told reporters. "If they want conflicts, I have 300,000 men always on hand." On Monday night, the area around Rome's city hall rang to chants of "Duce! Duce!", the term adopted by Italy's dictator, Benito Mussolini, equivalent to the German "Führer". Supporters of the new mayor gave the fascist Roman straight-arm salutes. Alemanno, however, has promised to be the mayor of all Romans. He yesterday sent telegrams to both the Pope and the Chief Rabbi. Rome's Jewish community was shaken by the prospect of a mayor with Alemanno's record. During the campaign, there was a protest aimed at him in the city's old Jewish ghetto, where many of the city's Jews still live. I wonder how much is real and how much is just the al-Guardian fantasizing. |
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Europe | |
Italy must be broken up, says Berlusconi's wife | |
2008-04-26 | |
Silvio Berlusconi's wife added her voice yesterday to the growing calls for Italy to be partitioned. In an interview with La Stampa, Veronica Lario, 51, said: "Italy has never been well-suited to being a single country, and has never matured enough to become one. There is no longer any value in a unified Italy." Ms Lario, a former showgirl, married Italy's prime minister-elect 18 years ago after catching his eye on a television show. Since then, she has rarely courted publicity, but does run Il Foglio, an influential newspaper. The prospect of a devolved Italy has grown significantly in recent weeks since the Northern League, a secessionist party, won strong support in the general election. Umberto Bossi, its volcanic leader, has repeatedly threatened to "take up arms" against the "corrupt" politicians in Rome who divert the wealth of Italy's North to the impoverished South. Ms Lario disclosed that she was a fan of Mr Bossi and added it was time for Italy to stop being "snobbish" about the League, whose politicians are frequently coarse and populist. "This is a disillusioned country, even after Berlusconi's victory," she said. "The League expresses concrete demands from the most productive part of Italy, which is tired of dragging the rest of the country and does not find itself represented by the Left-wing."
In the past, Mr Calderoli has called for immigrants to be shot in their boats and for a national pork-eating day to defy Islam. "If the people have voted for Mr Calderoli," said Ms Lario, "that gives him credibility". | |
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Europe | |
Heads roll after Libya's cartoon riots | |
2006-02-19 | |
No pun intended *snicker, snicker* Libya has suspended its security minister and other officials, a day after at least 10 people were killed during a demonstration at the Italian consulate in the north eastern city of Benghazi. In Rome, meanwhile, Roberto Calderoli, the Italian reform minister, has resigned, bowing to pressure from government colleagues after Libya blamed his anti-Islamic insults for igniting the demonstration, the most deadly yet of a continuing international A statement from the general secretariat of Libya's parliament on Saturday read: "Security Minister Nasr Mabrouk has been suspended from his duties and taken before an investigating magistrate." The statement added that a national day of mourning would be observed on Sunday to honour "our martyrs". Calderoli, of the The Libyan deaths took place after about 1000 people gathered to protest outside the Roman consulate. Calderoli, who has frequently attacked Islam in recent weeks and once called Muslim immigrants in Italy "Ali Babas" *chortle* , seemed defiant to the last, showing no signs of contrition in a series of newspaper interviews published on Saturday. "I can be sorry for the victims, but what happened in Libya has nothing to do with my T-shirt. The question is different. What's at stake is Western civilisation," the daily La Repubblica quoted him as saying. Yes, but logic and dhimmitude don't mix. Berlusconi-al-Qadhafi talk The al-Qadhafi foundation, headed by the reform-minded son of Muammar al-Qadhafi, the Libyan leader, issued a statement blaming the riot on Calderoli's "provocative and outrageous" actions. And who better to judge "provocative and outrageous" than the Al-Qadaffy foundation? Meanwhile, in a telephone conversation Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, and the Libyan leader agreed that the anti-Italian violence should have no "negative repercussions" for bilateral relations The two leaders had a "long and amicable" discussion focusing on Friday's violence in Benghazi. Minister Gianfranco Fini, the Italian foreign minister, quickly scheduled a visit to Rome's main mosque for later Saturday, saying he wanted "to reaffirm that we respect every religion, and we expect identical respect," according to the ANSA and Apcom news agencies. Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, the Italian president and a highly respected voice in the country, issued a statement saying that in Italy, "there is a clear, undisputed policy that reflects the dominant feeling of "Above all, those who have a responsibility in government have to show responsible behaviour," Ciampi said, adding that he was "deeply saddened" by the clashes at Benghazi. Calderoli defies PM In an interview with Italian newspaper La Repubblica, Calderoli said he had declined a previous plea to resign from Berlusconi last week, after he threatened to wear the T-shirt. "I'm certainly not changing my mind," he told the paper. Under the Italian constitution, the premier does not have the power to sack ministers. Lunch, on the other hand, can definitely be sacked. In comments reported by another newspaper, Corriere della Sera, Calderoli said he would resign only if Umberto Bossi, the Northern League leader, asked him to do so, and "after receiving a signal from the Islamic world that such a gesture would be useful". Please, oh Islamic world, give us infidels a sign! Calderoli travelled to Bossi's house in northern Italy on Saturday to meet him and Fini, another Northern League minister. Fini, who had earlier appealed to Calderoli to avoid provoking Muslims, blamed his fellow minister for the violence in Libya. "It was predictable that Calderoli's display would trigger reactions in the Arab world," Fini told La Repubblica.
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Steyn on Independence Day (and Independence) | |
2004-07-04 | |
To good to EFL. Hat tip: LGFON THURSDAY, to celebrate Americaâs Independence Day, I celebrated Americaâs independence â not just from George III but from the rest of what passes for the civilised world. You only have to listen to a couple of minutes of any BBC current affairs show or glance at the front pages of any Continental newspaper (or even, on particularly bad days, read selected Telegraph columnists) to realise that America is the western worldâs odd man out, and has been increasingly since September 11th. Personally, I couldnât be happier about it. Iâm delighted the United States is âout of stepâ with, say, Belgium. Not because Iâm Belgophobic. If the Belgians want to support the International Criminal Court, keep Saddam in office until his nuke arsenal is ready to fly, and continue subsidising Yasser Arafatâs pay-offs to the relicts of suicide bombers, thatâs fine, go ahead, youâre an independent nation.Ouch. | |
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Europe |
EU elite are filthy pigs, says Bossi |
2003-10-23 |
The European Unionâs elite are determined to destroy Europeâs Christian heritage, Italyâs reform minister, Umberto Bossi said yesterday. That is (forgive me) gospel truth, but you donât normally hear anyone from EUrabia talking about it. He described the elite as "filthy pigs" who wanted to "make paedophilia as easy as possible". Iâm not actually sure what heâs talking about here, but if it insults the French and those who wish they were French (Belgians and Democrats), then Iâm all for it. You go Bossi! Mr Bossi, leader of the Northern League (The guys that wanted to split the northern (profitable) portion of Italy from the southern (welfare state) portion. Iâm going to go out on a limb here and bet that they arenât big fans of the EU), said Brussels was "transforming vices into virtues" and "advancing the cause of atheism every day". He denounced the European arrest warrant as a step towards "dictatorship, deportation, and terror, instilling fear in the people, a crime in itself". It would lead to a Stalinist regime "multiplied by 25". True, true, and, oh yeah, true. One day Italian citizens would be locked up on the orders of Turkish judges not a happy thought, he told Il Giornale newspaper, which is owned by the family of the Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi. He added that the euro was a "total flop", its inflationary effects costing ordinary people "a fortune" in lost purchasing power. This is a good sign that the EU is begining to fray at the edges.... or maybe just at the fringes, but either way this guy hasnât said anything that isnât factual. Well, Iâm not sure that the Belgians are child molesters -- but Iâm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt! |
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