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VATILEAKS II

POPE

Vatileaks: Berlusconi brothers embroiled

A Vatican leaks scandal that was already rich in claims of sex, scheming and spying has widened to embroil Silvio Berlusconi and add allegations of blackmail and computer hacking to the mix.

Vatileaks: Berlusconi brothers embroiled
The Vatileaks scandal has widened to embroil Paolo Berlusconi. Photo: OIivier Morin/AFP

Former prime minister Berlusconi denied late on Tuesday that he had had any contact with Francesca Chaouqui, an ex-PR consultant to the Vatican who is one of five people, including two journalists, on trial over the leaking of classified Holy See documents.
   
Berlusconi issued the denial after it emerged that his brother Paolo, a newspaper publisher, had been named in an Italian investigation into Chaouqui and her husband Corrado Lanino which is separate from but related to the Vatican case.
   
Prosecutors suspect that Chaouqui attempted to pressure Paolo Berlusconi into sacking the newspaper Il Giornale's Vatican correspondent Fabio Marchesi Ragona by threatening to expose Silvio for supposedly holding a secret account at the Vatican bank.
   
Silvio Berlusconi's lawyer Niccolo Ghedini said his client was never informed of such a threat.
   
“Besides, it would have been impossible to make any 'demands' since there is no possible link between President Berlusconi and Vatican affairs or the Vatican bank,” he said.
   
Prosecutors suspect the alleged attempt to blackmail Paolo Berlusconi into silencing a journalist whose reports had embarrassed Chaouqui reflected a pattern of behaviour in which she used her status as a Vatican insider to secure favours or to provide contacts with access to high-ranking Vatican officials.

Conspiracy

Italy's financial police raided Chaouqui's Rome flat on Tuesday evening, seizing papers and computers.

According to media reports, her husband is also under investigation, suspected of using his computer hacking skills to assist his wife.
   
Prosecutors were alerted to Chaouqui's allegedly illicit conduct as they looked into another scandal to hit the Church, related to the sale of the 14th-century San Girolamo castle in Narni, Umbria.
   
Italian Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia is suspected of conspiring with local officials to buy the castle from the town council at an artificially low price with the intention of later selling it at its true value several years later.
   
Chaouqui is due to give evidence in the Vatican leaks trial when it resumes on Monday.
   
The case was adjourned this week to give her new lawyer more time to prepare her defence against charges that she, Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda and his assistant conspired to leak secret documents to which they had access as members of an economic reform commission appointed by Pope Francis.

The documents provide evidence of mismanagement in Vatican spending and some elements of corruption and were used as the basis of books by the two investigative journalists who are also on trial.
   
The Vatican has been widely criticised for pursuing the prosecution of the reporters in a case that has generated many embarrassing headlines for the Holy See.
   
The latest came earlier this week when it emerged that Vallejo Balda had made a statement saying he leaked the documents under Chaoqui's influence and that he had been sorely tempted to break his vow of celibacy as a result of her sexual advances.
   
She has rubbished his claims.

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PROTESTS

Thousands protest in Rome against fascist groups after green pass riots

An estimated 200,000 people descended on Rome on Saturday to call for a ban on fascist-inspired groups, after protests over Italy's health pass system last weekend degenerated into riots.

A general view shows people attending an anti-fascist rally called by Italian Labour unions CGIL, CISL and UIL at Piazza San Giovanni in Rome
People attend an anti-fascist rally called by Italian Labour unions CGIL, CISL and UIL at Piazza San Giovanni in Rome on October 16th, 2021. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP)

Carrying placards reading “Fascism: Never Again”, the protesters in Piazza San Giovanni — a square historically associated with the left — called for a ban on openly neofascist group Forza Nuova (FN).

FN leaders were among those arrested after the Rome headquarters of the CGIL trade union — Italy’s oldest — was stormed on October 9th during clashes outside parliament and in the historic centre.

Analysis: What’s behind Italy’s anti-vax protests and neo-fascist violence?

A man holds a placard reading "yes to the vaccine" during an anti-fascist rally at Piazza San Giovanni in Rome

A man holds a placard reading “yes to the vaccine” during an anti-fascist rally at Piazza San Giovanni in Rome on October 16th, 2021. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

“This is not just a retort to fascist ‘squadrismo’,” CGIL secretary general Maurizio Landini said, using a word used to refer to the fascist militias that began operating after World War I.

IN PICTURES: Demonstrators and far right clash with police in Rome after green pass protest

“This piazza also represents all those in Italy who want to change the country, who want to close the door on political violence,” he told the gathered crowds.

Last weekend’s riots followed a peaceful protest against the extension to all workplaces of Italy’s “Green Pass”, which shows proof of vaccination, a negative Covid-19 test or recent recovery from the virus.

The violence has focused attention on the country’s fascist legacy.

Saturday’s demonstration was attended by some 200,000 people, said organisers, with 800 coaches and 10 trains laid on to bring people to the capital for the event.

Workers from the Italian Labour Union (UIL) react during an anti-fascist rally in Rome

Workers from the Italian Labour Union (UIL) react during an anti-fascist rally in Rome on October 16th, 2021. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

It coincided with the 78th anniversary of the Nazi raid on the Jewish Ghetto in Rome.

Over 1,000 Jews, including 200 children, were rounded up at dawn on October 16th, 1943, and deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

General Secretary of the Italian General Confederation of Labour (CGIL), Maurizio Landini (C) delivers a speech as Italian priest Don Luigi Ciotti (R) looks on

General Secretary of the Italian General Confederation of Labour (CGIL), Maurizio Landini (C) delivers a speech as Italian priest Don Luigi Ciotti (R) looks on during the anti-fascist rally in Rome. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

“Neofascist groups have to be shut down, right now. But that has to be just the start: we need an antifascist education in schools,” university student Margherita Sardi told AFP.

READ ALSO: Covid green pass: How are people in Italy reacting to the new law for workplaces?

The centre-left Democratic Party, which has led the calls for FN to be banned, said its petition calling on parliament to do so had gathered 100,000 signatures.

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