An Italian court on Monday sentenced Silvio Berlusconi to seven years
in jail and banned the former premier from public office for life after
convicting him of paying for sex with an underage prostitute and abusing
his power to hide the liaison.
Berlusconi attacked “an incredible
sentence, of a violence never seen or heard before, handed down to try
and eliminate me from political life,” while his lawyers said they would
appeal.
The
sentence went beyond the request of prosecutors, who had called for the
billionaire, 76, to serve six years, and could spark serious tensions
within Italy’s uneasy grand coalition government.
“I was truly
convinced I would be absolved because there was absolutely no
possibility of being found guilty based on the evidence,” Berlusconi
said in a note, adding: “I am utterly innocent.”
The sentence was
“completely illogical,” his lawyer Niccolo Ghedini said, amid a clamour
from supporters accusing the Milan judges of persecuting the three-time
former prime minister.
The verdict brings to a climax a two-year
trial which kicked off a media frenzy — amid allegations of strippers
dressed as nuns and erotic party games with topless girls — and sparked
cheers and applause from anti-Berlusconi protesters outside the court.
The
media magnate’s cronies, many of whom took to Twitter in disgust,
described the verdict as “utterly shameful” and “a political verdict, a
coup d’etat.”
Berlusconi’s spokesman Paolo Bonaiuti said it
confirmed “the bid to eliminate Berlusconi from the political scene… but
the attempt, which has gone beyond the limits of credibility, will
fail.”
Berlusconi’s daughter, Marina, chairperson of his holding
company Fininvest, said it was “an absurd spectacle which had nothing to
do with justice” and the guilty verdict “was written from the start.”
James
Walston, politics professor at the American University of Rome, said
the conviction would “accentuate already existing divisions within the
cabinet.”
“Berlusconi’s supporters are defending him even more passionately than before. They are spitting fire and blood,” he said.
Interior
Minister Angelo Alfano, the secretary of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom
(PDL) party, said the verdict was “worse than the worst case scenario”
and urged him to “soldier on” — a possible reference to his support for
the government.
The coalition relies on the support of the PDL,
and observers had warned the capricious billionaire could pull the rug
out from under the government if he felt it was not offering him legal
protection.
The sentence will be suspended until all appeals have been exhausted, a process likely to take years.
Berlusconi’s
age also means he is unlikely to ever see the inside of a prison cell
because of lenient sentencing guidelines in Italy for people over the
age of 70.
– ‘Bunga bunga’ evenings –
The trial relates to
crimes committed in 2010 when Berlusconi was prime minister, and
revolves around what prosecutors have described as erotic parties held
at his luxury residence outside Milan.
Berlusconi was accused of
paying for sex on several occasions with Moroccan-born Karima
El-Mahroug, a then 17-year-old exotic dancer nicknamed “Ruby the Heart
Stealer”.
He was also accused of having called a police station to
pressure for El-Mahroug’s release from custody when she was arrested
for theft.
His defence claimed he believed El-Mahroug was the
niece of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and wanted to avoid a
diplomatic incident, but prosecutors insisted it was a bid to conceal
their affair.
While abuse of office was the more serious of the
charges, it was the sex with the pole dancer after racy “bunga bunga”
evenings in a basement room of his mansion that mesmerised the public.
El-Mahroug
described the “bunga bunga” sessions of erotic dancing to interrogators
in 2010, saying Berlusconi had picked up the custom from former Libyan
dictator Moamer Kadhafi.
Both the flamboyant billionaire and El-Mahroug denied having had sex.
Berlusconi
has been involved in a series of legal battles ever since entering
politics in the 1990s but multiple cases against him have either been
thrown out, expired under a statute of limitations, or had initial
convictions overturned on appeal.
The former cruise ship singer
has long blamed his legal woes on persecution by “Communist” judges, and
lashed out at them again on Monday.
A Milan court last month
upheld his conviction for tax fraud connected to his Mediaset empire,
confirming the punishment of a year in prison and a five-year ban from
public office, frozen pending a second appeal.
Monday’s sentence
is stiffer than some expected, and sets a worrying precedent just months
ahead of a definitive ruling in the tax fraud case — which is expected
to fall around October.
“The temperature has gone up for Berlusconi enormously,” Walston said.
“He now has to use every weapon in his armoury to get out of the Mediaset conviction,” he added.
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