Is this the end of the road for the irrepressible Silvio Berlusconi?

By Reuters and Standard Reporter

Italy: Silvio Berlusconi’s seven-year jail sentence on Monday is a body blow to a man considered to have the proverbial nine lives.

The former Italy premier was sentenced on Monday for abuse of office and paying for sex with a minor, adding to the complications facing Italy’s fragile left-right government.

However, Berlusconi will not have to serve any jail time before he has exhausted an appeals process that could take years, but the conviction angered members of his centre-right party who questioned whether he should continue to support the coalition.

The 76-year-old media tycoon expressed outrage at the verdict which he said was politically motivated.

“An incredible sentence has been issued of a violence never seen or heard of before, to try to eliminate me from the political life of this country,” Berlusconi said in a statement.

“Yet again I intend to resist against this persecution because I am absolutely innocent and I don’t want in any way to abandon my battle to make Italy a country that is truly free and just.”

Berlusconi’s lawyers announced they would appeal against the ruling that also banned him from holding public office.

Berlusconi was found guilty of paying for sex with former teenage nightclub dancer Karima El Mahroug, better known under her stage name “Ruby the Heartstealer”, during “bunga bunga” sex parties at his palatial home near Milan.

The panel of three women judges also convicted him of abuse of office by arranging to have El Mahroug released from police custody when she was held in a separate theft case.

The verdict closes a two-year trial that has mesmerised Italy with its accounts of wild sex parties at the billionaire’s villa outside Milan while he was premier in 2010.

Several members of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PDL) party have urged him to withdraw his backing for the government of centre-left Prime Minister Enrico Letta, which needs the PDL’s support.

“It’s disgusting, a disgrace,” one of his most faithful lieutenants, senior party official Daniela Santanche, told reporters in front of the Milan court.

She said the ruling would not impact the functioning of the government, but other Berlusconi allies were less conciliatory.

“It is absurd to think that the current government can continue to work calmly while the leader of one of the parties backing it is being massacred politically,” said PDL senator Sandro Bondi.

Letta’s Democratic Party (PD), which was dealt its own major blow on Monday by the resignation of Equal Opportunities and Sports Minister Josefa Idem over a tax evasion scandal, said the Berlusconi verdict should be respected and called on the PDL to show restraint.

Berlusconi says the purported sex parties were elegant dinners where the female guests performed “burlesque” shows. El Mahroug denied having sex with Berlusconi.

In the verdict, the judges said around 30 witnesses in the case, including Deputy Foreign Minister Bruno Archi, should be investigated for perjury for their testimony in favour of Berlusconi.

In May 2010, the then-prime minister called a Milan police station to instruct officials to release El Mahroug, who was being held on suspicion of stealing a 3,000 euro (Sh350,000) bracelet.

A Brazilian prostitute who lived with El Mahroug had called the premier on his mobile phone to tell him she had been arrested, prosecutors said. Berlusconi’s lawyers have said he made the call to avoid a diplomatic incident because he believed that El Mahroug, who is actually Moroccan, was the grand-daughter of Hosni Mubarak, then the Egyptian president.

The prosecution said he was anxious to cover up the relations he had with her at his sex parties.

The media magnate has recently used his own television stations to promote his version of events, with his flagship Canale 5 channel broadcasting a prime-time documentary on the so-called “Ruby Trial”.

The verdict is only part of Berlusconi’s legal problems. Last month an appeals court upheld a four-year jail sentence against him for orchestrating a tax fraud scheme in his business dealings — leaving him just one more appeal, at the Supreme Court, which could come within a year.

Despite Berlusconi’s professions of loyalty to Letta, he may eventually prefer to gamble on another election, in which he could potentially become prime minister once again.

Even if he opts to keep backing the government, the verdict could make parts of Letta’s PD party highly uneasy and increase the coalition’s instability, according to Giovanni Orsina, professor of contemporary history at Rome’s Luiss University.

“The PD would be in the same majority with a person who has been condemned in the first degree for juvenile prostitution, which is not a trivial issue,” he said before the ruling. “It would add up to a difficult situation.”

Berlusconi has an extensive record of criminal allegations, including mafia collusion, false accounting, tax fraud, corruption and bribery of police officers and judges. He has been tried in Italian courts in several cases.

In three of these cases accusations were dropped by the judiciary because of laws passed by Berlusconi’s parliamentary majority shortening the time limit for prosecution of various offences and making false accounting illegal only if there is a specific damaged party reporting the fact to the authorities.

In all of them, but one, either he was acquitted by a court or charges were dropped because the statute of limitations had expired. Therefore, he has not been sentenced up to now, despite having been found guilty of providing false testimony in 1990.

The former premier claimed that “this is a manifest judicial persecution, against which I am proud to resist, and the fact that my resistance and sacrifice will give the Italians a more fair and efficient judicial system makes me even more proud.” 

He added that “789 prosecutors and magistrates took an interest in him from 1994 to 2006 with the aim of subverting the votes of the Italian people” citing statistics that he said have constituted a “calvary including 577 visits by police, 2,500 court hearings and 174 million euros in lawyers’ bills paid by me.” 

Berlusconi has always been able to afford top lawyers, for example Nikolas Sarkozy was one of his French top advocates. 

Some of his former prosecutors later joined the parliamentary opposition. Some of his attorneys are also members of parliament.