Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was due to go back on trial for corruption yesterday, while in an unrelated Mafia case, a mobster-turned-witness may try to link him to the Cosa Nostra.
Berlusconi says biased courts are making false accusations to try to bring down the 19-month-old government and attack his broadcasting empire.
Berlusconi has been stripped of immunity from prosecution, enabling a Milan trial to resume yesterday in which he is accused of bribing British lawyer David Mills with US$600,000 in 1997 to withhold evidence on his business dealings.
Separately, a Turin court was due to hear evidence as part of an appeal yesterday of Marcello Dell’Utri, a Berlusconi associate, in a Mafia case to which the premier is not formally linked.
Berlusconi says a Mafia informant’s evidence that he and Dell’Utri were linked to a Cosa Nostra bombing campaign in 1993 is “unfounded” and threatens to sue papers that reported he was being investigated and that the mob had a stake in his business.
One court reopening the probe into the bombs in Rome, Milan and Florence has said that Berlusconi is not being investigated.
Dell’Utri, a senator in Berlusconi’s People of Freedom Party, is appealing against his conviction of association with the Mafia. He has been sentenced to nine years in prison.
A Sicilian court was due to travel to Turin to hear Gaspare Spatuzza, a convicted hitman, give evidence in a maximum security courtroom.
“We are going to make some declarations given that it’s the first time we have a chance to respond to his allegations, and then he will be interrogated by the prosecutor,” Dell’Utri’s lawyer, Giuseppe Di Peri said.
Spatuzza has already told magistrates that Berlusconi and Dell’Utri were mentioned to him in connection with the bombings by a Mafia boss who is now doing life for the Florence attack.
Five people died in the Florence bombing, which prosecutors say was part of a failed campaign by the Sicilian Mafia to scare the state into relaxing the harsh prison regime served by convicted mobsters.
One Mafia boss has rubbished Spatuzza’s evidence while the prime minister said last weekend: “If there’s a person who by nature, sensitivity, mentality, background, culture and political effort is very far from the Mafia, it is me.”
His government boasts that it has been arresting Mafiosi at the rate of eight per day and has confiscated some 10,000 Mafia properties.
Berlusconi’s trial for corruption in the Mills case was suspended, thanks to a law he passed which gave him immunity from prosecution. But this was then ruled unconstitutional, meaning two pending trials against him could resume.
Mills was convicted of taking a bribe in February and got a four and a half year jail sentence, pending appeal.
Berlusconi is also on trial for tax fraud and false accounting in the acquisition of media rights by Mediaset. Prosecutors say it paid an inflated price to offshore firms controlled by Berlusconi.
Berlusconi says he is confident of acquittal in both these cases but would remain premier even if convicted. He says he wants to be present in court but that his official commitments are an impediment to attending until a later date.
Berlusconi’s lawyers had originally said a Cabinet meeting yesterday would prevent him from attending, but they changed that to say he had to inaugurate a stretch of new highway.
That means the hearing may just set a new date. If delayed too long, the charges elapse under the statute of limitations, as happened in another case where Berlusconi’s holding company was hit with 750 million euros (US$1.1 million) in damages for bribing a judge, but criminal charges against Berlusconi had expired.
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