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SILVIO BERLUSCONI

Silvio Berlusconi: The scandal-hit ‘knight’ who divided Italians

Silvio Berlusconi, dominated Italian public life for decades as a billionaire media mogul, businessman and prime minister but was beset by scandals from corruption claims to wild sex parties.

Silvio Berlusconi: The scandal-hit 'knight' who divided Italians
File photo of ex-Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi with former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who died aged 86. (Photo by Claudio ONORATI / POOL / AFP)

The larger-than-life character, who once compared himself to Jesus, was Italy’s longest serving premier but was also plagued by scandal.

Despite being diagnosed with leukaemia, he was active in politics to the end as a senator and partner in Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s rightwing government.

READ ALSO: Italian ex-PM Silvio Berlusconi dies at 86

Berlusconi also wielded huge influence through his television and newspaper interests — he effectively invented commercial TV in Italy — his ownership of AC Milan football club, and his sheer wealth, as Italy’s richest person for a decade.

Long before Donald Trump parlayed his business success into a White House bid, Berlusconi charmed millions of Italians by presenting himself as a self-made man who enjoyed life and spoke his mind, even to the extent of insulting fellow leaders.

To his critics, however, the right-winger was a tax-evading playboy who used his vast media empire to further his political career, and then exploited his power to protect his business interests.

He spent much of his life embroiled in legal action, and the cases around his notorious “Bunga Bunga” sex parties, attended by young girls including underage escorts, were only wrapped up in February 2023.

Despite remaining president of his Forza Italia party, a junior partner in Meloni’s coalition, he had largely retired from public view in recent months.

Then-Prime Minister and Forza Italia party leader Silvio Berlusconi gestures as he leads the “No-Tax day” demonstatration in December 2004. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP)

He suffered increasing health problems – although he maintained his pride in his appearance, always smartly dressed, his slicked-back hair never showing the slightest trace of grey.

Berlusconi was hospitalised for 11 days in September 2020 after contracting coronavirus, describing it as “perhaps the most difficult ordeal of my life”.

In April 2023, doctors revealed he was in intensive care suffering from leukaemia and a lung infection.

‘Contract with Italians’

Berlusconi burst onto the political scene in the early 1990s, after building up a media and real estate business, where he was viewed as a breath of fresh air after a period of corruption and scandal.

Berlusconi mops his brow at the presentation of a book written by Italian journalist Bruno Vespa entitled “History of Italy: from Mussolini to Berlusconi” in December 2004. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

Pitching himself as a modern Italian success story, and backed by his TV stations and newspapers, he secured his first election victory in 1994 with his new movement, Forza Italia (Go Italy!), named after a football chant.

READ ALSO: ‘I got away with it!’: Berlusconi’s most outrageous quotes

He lasted as prime minister for only nine months, but bounced back with another election win in 2001 after a populist campaign promising jobs and economic growth, signing a “Contract with Italians” live on television.

He served until 2006, and returned again as prime minister between 2008 and 2011, making him the longest-serving premier in Italy’s post-war history.

Berlusconi with his long-time friend Russian President Vladimir Putin at Fiumicino airport in Rome on July 5, 2019. (Photo by Alexey DRUZHININ / SPUTNIK / AFP)
 

He was forced to quit as debt-laden Italy — the eurozone’s third largest economy — came under intense pressure during the financial crisis.

The tenure of the man dubbed “Il Cavaliere” (The Knight) divided Italians, as much as over his policies — including his controversial decision to join the US-led invasion of Iraq — as his entire approach to life.

Throughout his time in office, prosecutors snapped at his heels, even as his supporters in parliament passed laws to shield him and his allies.

Despite multiple court cases — he claimed in 2021 he had gone through 86 trials — he never spent any time behind bars and successfully appealed convictions for fraud and corruption early in his political career.

(FILES) Britain’s Prime Minister Tony Blair (L) and his Italian counterpart Silvio Berlusconi gesture during their joint news conference at Lancaster House in London, July 13, 2004. Italian ex-prime minister Silvio Berlusconi died at age 86. (Photo by DAVID BEBBER / POOL / AFP)

In 2013, Berlusconi received a definitive conviction for tax fraud, which saw him carry out community service in a care home for sufferers of Alzheimer’s.

He was also long suspected of links to the mafia, but strongly denied it.

‘Bunga Bunga’ disgrace

On the world stage, Berlusconi was known for his friendships with the likes of Libya’s Moamer Kadhafi and Russian President Vladimir Putin — the latter of whom he controversially defended following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

He had no time for traditional diplomacy, once likening a German European MP to a Nazi and describing US President Barack Obama as “suntanned”.

His image was further tarnished when lurid details emerged of his sex parties at his villa near Milan with its private disco, during a hugely embarrassing trial involving a 17-year-old nightclub dancer.

A picture from June 2004 shows then-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi (R) and his wife Veronica Lario in Rome. (Photo by VINCENZO PINTO / AFP)

Berlusconi was sentenced to seven years in prison in 2013 for paying for sex with Karima El-Mahroug, known as “Ruby the Heart Stealer” — but this was later overturned after the judge said there was reasonable doubt that he knew she was underage.

He then stood accused of bribing witnesses to lie about his parties, which he always insisted were elegant dinners. He was acquitted in three related trials.

A relationship with another teenager led to the end of his second marriage with former actress Veronica Lario, who left him in 2009 over his “cavorting with minors”.

In March 2022, he held a bizarre fake wedding with his girlfriend Marta Fascina, then 32.

Football glory

Berlusconi was born in 1936 in Milan to a bank employee father and a housewife mother. He went on to father five children, all involved in the running of his business empire.

As a young man, he was quick to realise his talents as an entertainer.

A huge fan of Nat King Cole, he played double bass in a band and made club audiences laugh with jokes during breaks from his law studies at the University of Milan.

As a student, he worked briefly as a cruise ship singer before launching a lucrative career in the booming construction sector in his 20s, which delivered his first fortune.

These funds were used to build a vast conglomerate spanning shops, cinemas, publishers, newspapers and cable television, where he broke new ground with commercial programmes filled with scantily clad women.

Crucially for his public persona, his empire also included football, one of Italy’s great passions.

As well as providing money for AC Milan, he regularly delivered dressing room and training ground pep talks during a period in which the club became one of the world’s most celebrated and trophied success stories.

Five of AC Milan’s seven European Cup/Champions League triumphs were achieved under Berlusconi’s 31-year ownership.

He sold the club in 2017 after years of lacklustre performances, and in 2018 bought Monza, then in Italy’s third tier.

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SILVIO BERLUSCONI

‘Ciao Silvio’: Italy holds state funeral for ex-PM Berlusconi

Devotees of former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi bid him farewell in Milan on Wednesday at a state funeral for the controversial billionaire, which closes a 30-year chapter in the country's history.

'Ciao Silvio': Italy holds state funeral for ex-PM Berlusconi

The coffin of the media mogul, adorned with white and red roses, was driven through the city from his villa in Arcore to the city’s Duomo, with mourners clapping and waving along the route.

It was then carried into the cathedral, escorted by a guard of honour, as his family walked behind.

READ ALSO: Silvio Berlusconi: The scandal-hit ‘knight’ who divided Italians

Thousands of the tycoon’s supporters, including a delegation from his Monza football club, watched on giant screens set up in the square as Archbishop Mario Delpini led the ceremony for Berlusconi, who died on Monday aged 86.

“When a man is a politician, then he tries to win. There are those who exalt him and those who cannot stand him,” Delpini said in his homily.

“When a man is a protagonist, then he is always on stage. He has those who applaud him and those who detest him,” he said.

Pallbearers, followed by family membres, carry the coffin of Italy’s former prime minister and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi, outside the Duomo cathedral in Milan on June 14, 2023. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

“But in this moment of farewell and prayer, what can we say about Silvio Berlusconi? He was a man: a desire for life, a desire for love, a desire for joy,” he added.

Berlusconi, adored and loathed by Italians in equal measure, had been ill for several years, though he remained the official head of his right-wing Forza Italia party, a member of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s coalition government.

Italian President Sergio Mattarella, Meloni and fellow coalition partner Matteo Salvini, head of the far-right League, were at the funeral, while the European Union was represented by its economy commissioner Paolo Gentiloni.

A banner reading “Bye Silvio, thanks for everything, the young people of Italy” as people wait outside the Duomo cathedral in Milan on June 14, 2023. (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP)

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban was also present, along with Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani and Iraqi President Abdel Latif Rashid.

He counted President Vladimir Putin among his friends, but the Russian leader is subject to an international arrest warrant and could not travel to Italy.

READ ALSO: ‘I got away with it!’: Berlusconi’s most outrageous quotes

The longest-serving premier in Italy’s post-war history, and re-elected to the Senate last year, Berlusconi was known for making numerous controversial and offensive statements on the international stage.

Berlusconi is survived by his 33-year-old girlfriend, Marta Fascina, with whom he held a fake wedding last year and who was at his bedside as he succumbed to a rare type of blood cancer.

(L-R): Berlusconi’s son Pier Silvio, daughter Barbara, brother Paolo, daughter Marina, son Luigi and partner Marta Fascina arrive at the Duomo cathedral in Milan. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

She was joined in the front pews by Berlusconi’s two ex-wives and five children, some of whom helped run his empire, recently estimated to be worth around $7 billion.

“You were a great man and an extraordinary father to our children,” his first wife Carla Dall’Oglio wrote in a eulogy on Tuesday.

Flags were lowered to half mast on all public buildings from Monday in tribute to a leader whose influence extended well beyond politics, thanks to his extensive TV, newspaper and sporting interests.

Parliament was suspended for seven days and the government declared a national day of mourning for Wednesday – the first ever for an ex-prime minister.

The decision was criticised by Berlusconi’s detractors, who accused him of cronyism, corruption and pushing through laws to protect his own interests.

People wait outside the Duomo cathedral in Milan on June 14, 2023 ahead of the state funeral for Italy’s former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.(Photo by PIERO CRUCIATTI / AFP)

Senator Andrea Crisanti said he was “strongly against” such national honours for “someone who had no respect for the state”, pointing to Berlusconi’s definitive conviction for tax fraud in 2013.

Rosy Bindi, former head of the Antimafia Commission, said it was “inopportune” for “a person as divisive as Berlusconi” and the Repubblica daily said the “institutional shutdown” was “extreme” and compared it to Britain’s protocol for Queen Elizabeth II’s death.

Democratic Party MEP Alessandra Moretti said: “With all due respect … it seems to me very over-the-top to freeze parliamentary work for seven days. I think Italians find it hard to understand this decision, especially given that there are numerous dossiers awaiting urgent responses, first of all the Recovery Plan.”

Berlusconi built a pharaoh-inspired marble mausoleum at his villa in Arcore, near Milan, to house his family and friends when they die.

At the moment it lies empty. It was not yet clear if Berlusconi’s family had requested the necessary permission to bury him there.

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