venerdì 28 gennaio 2011

‘New under-age girl in Berlusconi scandal’

The woman at the centre of Italy’s sex scandal broke her silence yesterday as new allegations emerged about Silvio Berlusconi, including relations with another under-age prostitute.

Nicole Minetti, 25, whose British mother Georgina Reed is a dance teacher in the beach resort of Rimini, has been summoned to appear before Milan prosecutors on Tuesday to answer charges that she recruited prostitutes for the Prime Minister.

Prosecutors revealed new phone taps of Ms Minetti in which she called Mr Berlusconi an “old man”. A 227-page dossier lodged by prosecutors with Parliament also showed that 12kg of cocaine had been seized from a man who had been using Ms Minetti’s car.

“I’m not here to play the role of the two-bit madam,” Ms Minetti told the Corriere della Sera newspaper. “Anyone who knows me, knows who I am.”

The former dental hygienist, who became a TV showgirl and a politician in the Prime Minister’s party after treating him as a patient, could decide the fate of the Italian leader. But Mr Berlusconi telephoned a late-night TV talk show and praised Ms Minetti.

Ms Minetti said that she had been moved by the Prime Minister’s unprompted defence. “I would have liked to thank him because it was a nice gesture on his part,” she said. “Let’s just say that now is not the best time to do so.”

In phone taps lodged with Parliament by prosecutors, however, Ms Minetti complained that Mr Berlusconi was just trying to save himself. She was recorded refusing to attend a meeting allegedly organised by Mr Berlusconi, for the young female guests at his parties to talk to his lawyers.

“No, because . . . I have to talk to my lawyer. I’m under investigation. For me, things are different,” Ms Minetti said in a phone intercept. “If he wants to see me, he can call himself, but if I go, I’ll go with my lawyers.”

Ms Minetti also featured in new allegations about the cocaine, confiscated from the boyfriend of Marystelle Polanco, a dancer who said that she slept with Mr Berlusconi because he paid her daughter’s medical bills. Ms Minetti had lent her car to Ms Polanco while she was on holiday in the Seychelles. Because of the drug allegations, she is thought to have considered reporting the car stolen.

The scandal escalated yesterday, with new revelations that a second alleged under-age prostitute visited the homes of Mr Berlusconi.

Iris Berardi, a Brazilian, twice visited Mr Berlusconi’s properties before her 18th birthday — the legal age for prostitution in Italy — the documents showed. She visited Villa Certosa in Sardinia on November 21, 2009, when the Prime Minister was in Saudi Arabia. She also allegedly spent the night at his Villa San Martino, outside Milan, on December 13, 2009, the evening that Mr Berlusconi was hit in the face with a statuette. Ms Berardi turned 18 on December 28, 2009.

Mr Berlusconi is already under investigation by Milan prosecutors for allegedly paying for sex with Karima El Mahroug, a Moroccan belly dancer, sometimes known as “Ruby Heart-Stealer”. Prosecutors said they did not plan a separate inquiry into the Prime Minister’s links with Ms Berardi.

In earlier extracts from the prosecutors’ dossier another belly dancer described Mr Berlusconi’s “bunga-bunga” parties, alleging sexual antics between him and young women.

A parliamentary committee has refused Milan prosecutors permission to search the office of Mr Berlusconi’s accountant, who admitted paying Ms El Mahroug at least €8,500 (£7,300).


Opposition fiddles as Rome burns

The great white hope of the Italian Left is a gay former Communist poet. That says almost all you need to know about the state of the opposition in Silvio Berlusconi’s Italy.

As new phone taps are published almost daily detailing the Prime Minister’s alleged “bunga bunga” sex parties, his governing People of Freedom party is still riding high in the polls.

The last opinion survey found that, despite the snowballing sex scandal, support for Berlusconi’s party has shot up almost three points to 30.2 per cent since December, making it probable that his Government would win any early election.

His culture minister, Sandro Bondi, who was blamed for recent collapses in the ruins of Pompeii, easily survived a no-confidence motion in parliament on Wednesday.

Now Mr Berlusconi’s party and its Northern League coalition partner have turned their sights on Gianfranco Fini, a former protégé who tried unsuccessfully to topple the Prime Minister in a no-confidence vote in December.

The Berlusconi loyalists, out for revenge, are trying to force Mr Fini to resign as speaker of the lower chamber of Parliament.

As ammunition, they are using a scandal about the secret sale of a house in Monte Carlo to Mr Fini’s brother-in-law.

Nichi Vendola, the earring-wearing gay ex-Communist Governor of Apulia in the heel of Italy, and head of the Left Ecology Freedom Party, has a maverick outsider appeal. In personal popularity, he scores higher than Mr Berlusconi.

But he is an easy target for Mr Berlusconi’s camp. Il Giornale, the Berlusconi family newspaper, this week ran a front-page photograph of Mr Vendola being tongue-kissed in the ear by a man at a gay pride march. The headline: “Can this man claim to teach us morals?”

Some detected a veiled attack on Mr Vendola when Mr Berlusconi told a motorcycle industry trade show, in the midst of the sex scandal, that “it’s better to like beautiful girls than to be gay”.

Mr Berlusconi derives his amazing staying power from the continued strength of anti-Communist coalition that existed in Italy during the Cold War, keeping the Christian Democrats in power for decades.

Rather than focus on opposing politicians, the billionaire tycoon attacks leftwing journalists and supposedly Communist magistrates he calls the “Red Robes”.

Il Giornale, the family organ, this week declared that the “real opposition” to Mr Berlusconi came from three TV talk shows —Annozero, Ballaro and L’Infedele — which the media tycoon does not control.

Mr Berlusconi occasionally telephones in to these shows unannounced to vent his anger, as he did this week on L’Infedele. The host, Gad Lerner, called him a “boor”.

The prosecutors have no political mouthpiece. But a new newspaper,Il Fatto Quotidiano, has won over 100,000 readers by focusing on news of Italy’s myriad corruption investigations and sex scandals.

Mr Berlusconi is now more threatened by his own current and former allies on the Right than he is by the Left.

The Northern League, a regionalist party that wants the richer North to stop paying for the crime-ridden South, could pull the plug on the coalition Government at any time. Polls show that it would emerge from a snap election as the kingmaker.

Centre-Right politicians are in a quandary. Many are happy with the conservative Government, but just want to get rid of the embarrassing Mr Berlusconi.

Pierferdinando Casini, of the Union of the Centre (UDC), who was in Mr Berlusconi’s last coalition Government until 2006, this week proposed a new Centre-Right ruling coalition without Mr Berlusconi.

“The UDC is ready to enter into a Centre-Right majority but with a government that is not run by Silvio Berlusconi, who should quit after the Ruby case,” he told La Stampa.

The proposal, which could have lifted Italy out of its political paralysis, received short shrift from Mr Berlusconi’s side.

“When the honourable Mr Casini proposes a government with the People of Freedom he reveals at best that he has not understood what Berlusconi represents in Italy’s political life, what moderate Italian voters think, and what the People of Freedom has become,” said Mr Bondi, the culture minister.


Berlusconi faces ‘second under-age prostitute’ claim

Silvio Berlusconi faces new questions today about the presence of an under-age Brazilian girl at his alleged “bunga bunga” sex parties.

A new 227-page dossier presented by Milan prosecutors to parliament contains phone records showing that Iris Berardi, a reputed prostitute, twice visited Mr Berlusconi’s homes before her 18th birthday, the legal age for prostitution in Italy.

Ms Berardi, who reportedly moved to Milan from her home in Forli and became a prostitute at 17 and turned 18 on December 28, 2009, visited Mr Berlusconi’s Villa Certosa in Sardinia on November 21, 2009, at a time when the Prime Minister was in Saudi Arabia.

She also allegedly spent the night at his Villa San Martino outside Milan on December 13, 2009. That was the evening Mr Berlusconi was hit in the face with a statuette by a deranged man.

Mr Berlusconi is already under investigation by Milan prosecutors for allegedly paying for sex with another under-age prostitute, Karima El Mahroug, a Moroccan belly-dancer whose stagename was Ruby Heart-Stealer.

The 227 pages of documents involve a torrent of new allegations, including a detailed description of an alleged “bunga-bunga” sex party. They were presented to support a request to search the office of the Prime Minister’s personal accountant.

According to extracts published on the website of the news magazineL’espresso, a belly dancer named Maria Makdoum described what happened at one “bunga-bunga” party.

“When dinner ended, the Prime Minister said: ‘And now let’s do the bunga-bunga’ and explained what it was, a sexual thing.

“You belly dance. The De Vivo [twins] in knickers and bras. The Prime Minister touched them and they touched him in his private parts,” she said.

“Then the Brazilian girl in a loincloth danced the samba in a X-rated manner. The Prime Minister touched her breast and other intimate parts. The other girls also danced, showing their breasts and their backs, all approaching the Prime Minister, who touched them on their private parts. I was horrified.”

The prosecutors also reported that police had confiscated 12kg of cocaine from a man who lived with Marystelle Polanco. She is a dancer on one of Mr Berlusconi’s television channels who has said she had sex with him because he helped to pay her daughter’s medical bills.

The man, identified as Ramirez della Rosa, was allegedly using a Mini Cooper on loan to Ms Polanco from Nicole Minetti, the half-British former dental hygienist-turned-politician who is accused of recruiting prostitutes for the Prime Minister.

Prosecutors yesterday summoned Ms Minetti, whose British mother is a dance teacher in the beach resort of Rimini, to appear for questioning on February 1.

Mr Berlusconi, who is under investigation for allegedly paying for sex with an under-age prostitute named “Ruby Heart-Stealer” and then intervening with police to have her released when she was arrested for theft, called the prosecutors’ latest move “scandalous”.

“I’ve been through so many things in my life,” he said, “and I’ve always come out just fine.”

Niccolò Ghedini, his lawyer, dismissed the prosecutors’ case as “only gossip, phone calls between girls”.

The dossier reportedly also includes a notebook belonging to “Ruby”, the Moroccan belly-dancer, listing money and gifts she had allegedly received from Mr Berlusconi and his entourage.

The prosecutors’ new onslaught came just hours after Mr Berlusconi’s defence team submitted its own version of events to parliament.

Defence witnesses, ranging from a DJ and a bodyguard to a famous journalist and Ruby herself, described the alleged “bunga-bunga” parties as normal dinners with no sex and only moderate drinking, with many guests sticking to Diet Coke and water. One said that the raciest the parties got was karaoke singing.

Regional councillor and former television showgirl Nicole Minetti attends a session in the Lombardy regional parliament in Milan

Nicole Minetti, who is accused of recruiting prostitutes for Silvio Berlusconi Matteo Bazzi/EPA

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/europe/article2890247.ece#tab-5

giovedì 27 gennaio 2011

Berlusconi's Worst Nightmare

The decades-long battle between Silvio Berlusconi and Italy's most famous prosecutor is entering its final round. The prime minister's career and Italy's democracy hang in the balance.

BY PHILIP WILLAN | JANUARY 26, 2011



Last week, the Italian magazine Panorama published a huge photo of Ilda Boccassini, Milan's 61 year-old public prosecutor, on its front cover under the title "Il Vizietto," the Little Vice. The vice in question was not that of the magazine's owner, Silvio Berlusconi, who is the current and long-time object of Boccassini's investigatory ardor. The misbehavior that the magazine intended to highlight was the magistrate's own -- namely, her relentless persecution of the Italian prime minister. Indeed, in seeking an indictment of Berlusconi for the better part of the past two decades, Boccassini has herself become a defendant in Italy's court of public opinion.

Boccassini, who over the course of her career has earned the nickname "Ilda the Red" for both her flame-colored hair and her left-wing sympathies, has polarized a society sharply divided when it comes to the embattled prime minister. An opinion poll published Jan. 23 by the Corriere della Seranewspaper showed that 49 percent of Italians thought Berlusconi should resign because of his latest sex scandal, while 45 percent believed he should not. Boccassini has earned the support of those who dislike Berlusconi: Roberto Saviano, the bestselling author who has a famously contentious relationship with the prime minister, dedicated an honorary law degree he received last week to Boccassini, praising her for fulfilling her "duty of justice." But for admirers of the premier, the prosecutor has become a symbol of the judiciary's obsessive, and self-interested, drive to restore its place at the top of the national political hierarchy.

Italy's judicial officials pride themselves for having essentially been the founding fathers of the current political order, the so-called "Second Republic" that got its start in the mid-1990s. Italy's "First Republic," which was inaugurated after the conclusion of World War II, was ostensibly democratic, but it was never marked by a consistent rule of law. The highest echelons of power were in the hands of a corrupt network of politicians, industrialists, and organized criminals, and little was done to challenge the elite. With the specter of Italy's Communist Party and the threat of Soviet espionage looming large, the judiciary tacitly agreed not to dig into the crimes of leading public servants.

That changed with the collapse of the Soviet Union. The "Bribesville" corruption investigations of the early 1990s revealed to the Italian public for the first time the extent of political corruption plaguing their government and economy. Spearheaded by the Milan public prosecutor's office of which Boccassini is now a part, the investigation forced politicians and top businessmen to testify in damning court proceedings that were televised nationwide. An entire political generation was tainted and discredited by the ensuing trials: Four of Italy's seven existing parties disbanded entirely, including the Christian Democratic Party that had been the dominant force in politics for the previous 50 years. The series of electoral, ethics, and economic reforms subsequently passed from 1992 through 1997 heralded the beginning of the Second Republic, under which the elite were to be held accountable for their misdeeds.

Most of Italy's politicians have consistently been on the defensive ever since, daunted by the watchful eye of the courts. Berlusconi has been the major exception. Some suspect that the media magnate started his political career in the wake of the Bribesville affair precisely to mitigate its effect on his own financial dealings. Indeed, taking the courts down a peg -- most often with dismissive rhetoric, but also by passing laws that shield him and his associates from prosecution -- has been one of Berlusconi's most consistent political priorities over the years.

For Boccassini and Berlusconi, the stakes are higher now than they've ever been: This may well be their final showdown. But with the country's newspaper headlines reaching a tawdry fever pitch and the national government unable to conduct its business amid the din of accusations and counteraccusations, it increasingly seems that the case will be settled in the court of public opinion before it ever engages the attention of a judge.

Boccassini is largely responsible, however unintentionally, for instigating the nationwide furor. On Jan. 15, she sent a 389-page document to the parliamentary authorizations committee -- which was promptly, and unsurprisingly, leaked to the media -- to support her request for permission to search the office of Berlusconi's personal finance manager for evidence that the prime minister had paid for sex with an underage prostitute and abused his office to cover up the crime. Berlusconi's defenders say that the prosecutor revealed her political bias from the very beginning: Whereas the prosecution's request could have been satisfied with just a few pages of summarized evidence, Boccassini's document contains lurid allegations about the prime minister's private life.

Sensing (or choosing to believe) that this was as much a political as a judicial campaign, Berlusconi's mighty media empire -- three national television channels, a daily newspaper, and several weekly magazines -- has portrayed Boccassini's investigation as a witchhunt. The magistrates have mounted a kind of judicial coup d'état, they say, attempting to subvert Italy's democratic elections. "It's the usual attempt by fanatics in the judiciary to overstep their proper role and influence the political scene," Mariastella Gelmini, who serves under Berlusconi as education minister, told Panorama. The Berlusconi camp accuses the magistrates of devoting disproportionate resources to the most recent inquiry: Investigators had conducted almost 100,000 wiretaps in a six-month period, at a rate of about 600 per day.

Berlusconi has testified to the public on his own behalf in a video message that he sent last week to an association of his supporters, the Freedom Promoters, and that was later broadcast by his television channels. In it, he personally accused the prosecutors of conjuring a case against him from thin air, invading his privacy and that of his friends, and intimidating witnesses. It was Boccassini and her colleagues, not Berlusconi himself, he claimed, who merited "adequate punishment."

While prosecutors haven't responded to Berlusconi's accusations that their investigation has been unlawful, there's been no doubting that it has been tireless: Investigators carefully tracked cell phone signals in Berlusconi's Arcore mansion to build a picture of the colorful female entourage gravitating around the prime minister, a technique first used in the hunt for mafia boss Salvatore "Toto" Riina in 1993. And it's no coincidence that the Berlusconi investigation, with its blend of sophisticated technological surveillance and meticulous traditional police work, resembles an anti-mafia probe: Boccassini honed her investigative skills, after all, in the battle against the Cosa Nostra.

Born in Naples, Boccassini became a prosecutor in 1977, cutting her teeth in the 1980s mafia investigations. Along the way, she earned a reputation for irascible stubbornness and moral rectitude: She rarely speaks to journalists and imposes strict secrecy on those who work for her. Some say she was scarred by the murder in 1992 of her onetime colleague and close friend, Giovanni Falcone, the legendary mafia investigator. Boccassini moved to Sicily immediately afterward to help investigate the killers, who were eventually convicted of the crime. But in a speech at a Milan high school in 2007, she admitted that she has never entirely gotten over the loss. "I still feel resentment and anger," she said. "That's not nice, but I have to admit that's how it is."

Boccassini's relationship with the prime minister is inextricably linked to the Falcone case: In investigating his murder in the early 1990s, she came across allegations that Berlusconi, who was serving his first stint as prime minister at the time, had financial ties to the Sicilian mafia. So Boccassini was already familiar with Berlusconi when she was tasked in 1995 with investigating him for bribing Rome magistrates in order to gain control of the Mondadori publishing group. On that occasion Berlusconi got off the hook, because his legan team managed to drag out the proceedings beyond the statute of limitations.

Given that history, Boccassini could be forgiven for approaching Berlusconi's current case with a priori suspicions. But her supporters insist that the investigations of the prime minister are not in any way the product of a personal vendetta. "She subscribes to Falcone's philosophy, which holds that a judge must act without passion, depersonalizing and depoliticizing his approach to his work," said a Milan journalist who knows her well, but did not want to be identified. "She is very cold and detached."

The result so far has been a stalemate: The prime minister has avoided punishment, but Berlusconi's associates have been convicted for crimes apparently committed on his behalf. One of Berlusconi's lawyers, David Mills, was convicted in 2009 for pocketing a $600,000 bribe to commit perjury on his behalf; a business associate, Marcello Dell'Utri, was sentenced last year to seven years in prison for complicity with the Cosa Nostra; but through it all, Berlusconi himself has remained untouched. Time after time, he has either been acquitted, seen the case against him timed out under the statute of limitations, or simply had the law changed to abolish the crime. (Until recently, Berlusconi had made liberal use of an immunity law in order to avoid trial, though that statute was thrown out by Italy's constitutional court earlier this month.)

The pursuit of the prime minister has been a chastening experience for Boccassini. Because of her insistence on holding the prime minister accountable, she and her colleagues have been subject to disciplinary proceedings initiated by the justice minister, and she has watched as other colleagues have been promoted ahead of her. What's clear to everyone by now is that Boccassini isn't easily deterred or intimidated: On Jan. 24, she announced that the latest evidence compiled against Berlusconi, on charges of illegal prostitution and abuse of office, is so clear cut that she will move for a fast-track trial for the prime minister. A trial could begin in as little as three months, and a conviction would undoubtedly put an abrupt end to Berlusconi's 17-year political career.

But Berlusconi can still use his soapbox to try to rally the public against Boccassini and her colleagues. Indeed, the bombastic prime minister has been less inclined to offer sober arguments about the rule of law than wage a scorched-earth campaign to delegitimize the judiciary wholesale. Boccassini may have always claimed to just be a prosecutor, but with the legitimacy of Italy's judiciary threatening to erode under Berlusconi's onslaught, she now finds herself public defender of an entire political order.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/01/26/berlusconis_worst_nightmare

Decadence and Democracy in Italy

Silvio Berlusconi

Stefano Rellandini/Reuters

The New York Times

Updated January 26, 2011

Introduction

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's career and personal life have caused outrage for as long as he's been in the public eye. In the latest scandal, wiretapped phone conversations suggest that Mr. Berlusconi has beeninvolved with Karima el-Mahroug, a nightclub dancer, since she was a minor. Aninvestigation has been opened into allegations that Mr. Berlusconi paid Ms. Mahroug and other women for sex.

However, less than 50 percent of Italians are asking for his resignation according to a recent poll. His political future seems, at least for the time being, secure.

Why have Italians -- especially the women -- tolerated Mr. Berlusconi's antics for so long? Is there a tipping point for Italians?

Read the Discussion »

http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2011/01/26/decadence-and-democracy-in-italy


martedì 25 gennaio 2011

Irate Italian PM Berlusconi makes surprise call to TV amid sex scandal, calls show "brothel"

Associated Press


ROME (AP) — A furious Silvio Berlusconi has called into a TV talk show about the prostitution investigation that has targeted him, shouting, trading insults with the host and calling the program a "brothel."

The outburst stirred strong reactions Tuesday. The Italian premier's supporters said Berlusconi had a right to defend himself, while his critics called the comments a display of aggression by an increasingly desperate man.

Berlusconi is not new to calling live TV shows to complain about coverage or vent frustration. But his comments Monday night were harsher than usual.

"I've been watching a disgusting show, conducted in a despicable, vile and repugnant way," Berlusconi said.

The talk show host, well-known left-leaning journalist Gad Lerner, invited Berlusconi to tone down his comments and at one point called him a "lout" when Berlusconi made a swipe against the female guests on the show.

"Why don't you go before the magistrates instead of insulting people?" Lerner asked the premier.

Berlusconi has refused to heed a summons by Milan prosecutors, who have placed him under investigation on suspicion he paid for sex with a 17-year-old girl and used his office to cover it up.

The 74-year-old premier has denied wrongdoing, saying he never paid for sex. He has insisted — as he has in the face of previous legal woes — that he is the victim of politically driven magistrates who want to oust him from power.

"The reality that has been represented here is the opposite of the truth and I feel insulted," Berlusconi said during the show. "I know what I'm saying, you don't," he told the host. He urged a political ally in the studio to leave this "incredible TV brothel."

The show was on La7, a private station that is one of the few national channels over which Berlusconi, a media tycoon, has no control. He owns Mediaset, the country's largest private broadcaster, and as premier indirectly controls the state-run RAI.

Berlusconi has come under mounting criticism from the Catholic church, and some have called for his resignation in the face of a scandal they say is hurting Italy's image.

He insists parties at his villas are elegant and dignified soirees and not the bacchanalia described by Italian newspapers, which for days have been filled with descriptions of dancing topless girls and orgies. The newspapers have printed what they say are transcripts of prosecutor-ordered wiretaps of conversations amid participants at the parties.

The premier's lawyers have put together their defense documents and left them with Milan prosecutors.

The lawyers have not publicly commented on what the documents say, but Corriere della Sera, the newspaper that broke the news of the probe days ago, said they include testimony from several witnesses denying the allegations. According to Corriere, the witnesses give an altogether different description of Berlusconi's parties, saying that after dinner, guests move into one of two rooms: a disco, or a cinema that shows movies, excerpts of political events or speeches and football matches of AC Milan, the team owned by Berlusconi.

A parliamentary committee that has to decide whether to give prosecutors special permission to search some of Berlusconi's properties was set to start discussing the case Tuesday. A decision is not expected for a few days.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-eu-italy-berlusconi-scandal,0,3730261.story

domenica 23 gennaio 2011

Surreal: A Soap Opera Starring Berlusconi

Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters (Above); Reuters (Top)

As her gripping testimony, décolletage and muted leopard-print top drove up ratings on a channel owned by Mr. Berlusconi, Ms. Mahroug said she had never had sex with him — “He never even laid a finger on me” — and never asked for 5 million euros ($6.7 million) to keep quiet. “I’m capable of exaggerating, but not that,” she said.

Nor, she said, had she ever worked as a prostitute, although she did say Mr. Berlusconi gave her 7,000 euros in cash after the first party she attended at his house (when they were introduced, she said, “Hi, I’m Ruby, and I’m 24,” she recalled). She also said she once stripped for “a client” at a Milan hotel, but when she told him it was her first time, he paid her 1,000 euros and told her to leave.

Ms. Mahroug seemed unfazed by the suggestion that wiretapped phone conversations published in the Italian press last week might contradict her. (In one, she said she had attended the prime minister’s parties since she was 16.) Nor was she moved by prosecutors’ allegations that Mr. Berlusconi had described her as a niece of Egypt’s president when the prime minister helped release her from police custody for theft last May.

“Oh, I don’t know what’s in the wiretaps,” Ms. Mahroug said. “I don’t know what journalists write that’s true or not true.”

Neither, it seems, do many Italians. Ms. Mahroug’s performance was the latest installment in a surreal and very Italian tragicomedy — one that blurs fact and fiction, reality and reality television — in a land where the border between appearance and reality has long been hazy, both in and out of politics.

In this episode, magistrates recently announced that they were investigating whether Mr. Berlusconi gave Ms. Mahroug and other women cash, gifts and rent-free housing in exchange for sex. But the full drama has been airing for the 17 years that Mr. Berlusconi has been Italy’s most colorful politician, playing to an audience shaped by the sensationalist television culture he helped create in his three decades as Italy’s largest private broadcaster.

Today, the dramatic tension is rising. Mr. Berlusconi appears less the leader of a Western European democracy than a character in a late Roman Imperial drama, whose actors seem powerless to control their fates against larger currents of destiny. “He is, in a certain sense, a prisoner of this world that he created,” said Mario Calabresi, the editor of the Turin daily La Stampa.

As described in the Italian press, it is a world in which older men hold court and flirt with leggy showgirls and where middle-aged women, a prime audience for Mr. Berlusconi’s channels and an important bloc in his electorate, swoon over young male heartthrobs. It is also a world in which bad girls confess that they just want to leave “the world of spectacle” to get married and settle down, as Ms. Mahroug said in her interview, to the applause of the audience.

Gently prodded by Alfonso Signorini, a host on Mr. Berlusconi’s channels and the editor of Chi, a tabloid owned by the Berlusconi family and central to its image-building, Ms. Mahroug described a rough life.

She said she was raped at age 9 by two uncles in Morocco, a claim her father is contesting in the press, and moved to Italy with her mother, where she struggled in school and turned to petty theft. She said was ashamed of being Moroccan, so told people that she was Egyptian.

“I invented a parallel life,” she said.

“You invented a parallel life,” Mr. Signorini echoed. Not quite an admission of guilt, the line became a running theme in the interview — and the key to understanding the entire scandal, if not Italy itself.

HOW can it be, many non-Italians ask, that Mr. Berlusconi is still in power? The basic answer is simple: politics. A growing number of Italians would probably change the channel if they saw an alternative, but the left is weak and the center unfocused, and for now the prime minister has a parliamentary majority, if narrow. His fate now lies with his coalition partner, the Northern League, which is growing increasingly restive, and no one has ruled out early elections.

But then there are the parallel lives. Average Italians express such disdain for their politicians, and for the many scandals they have lived through, that they can see the latest drama unfolding on one plane while they try to get on with their lives on another. Italy is a survival culture, steeped in that most time-honored survival mechanism: fatalistic resignation.

Since the Roman Empire, politics here has been seen as a means to power and money. Even today, Italy remains a land where complex networks of connections and family ties can still, as in feudal times, count more than merit or position, whether in getting a job or a bank loan. In my experience, Italians have a highly sophisticated understanding of power dynamics, a keen sense of whom you have to say yes to, and with whom you can get away with saying no.

In the wiretaps to emerge in the scandal, dozens of women appear to have been encouraged by their families and friends to get as close to Mr. Berlusconi as possible so that he might somehow help out in business dealings. He remains the biggest patron in a patronage society, and many Italians can understand that.

There is also an entrenched Catholic culture of forgiveness. Written on the facade of the Justice Ministry in downtown Rome are the words “Ministry of Grace and Justice,” in that order.

Mr. Berlusconi, who has denied all wrongdoing, has repeatedly said that it is outrageous for magistrates to leak wiretaps from preliminary investigations to the press without sanctions. (A bill his government advanced that would restrict wiretapping has stalled in Parliament.) The prime minister has repeeatedly depicted magistrates as a self-contained caste, a de facto political opposition that is out to get him. In fact, Italians show little faith in their slow and chaotic justice system, and many shrug off the scandal. “What do you expect? Judges are judges” is a common refrain.

Lately, however, the particular details of this scandal are proving too much for at least some Italians, including thousands of women who, disgusted by the wiretaps, have signed a petition calling for Mr. Berlusconi’s ouster.

“Do you have a nurse’s outfit?” the television agent Lele Mora asks one young woman he is inviting to a party at Mr. Berlusconi’s home, according to one transcript of a wiretap. “Go out and get one today,” he adds, telling her to wear nothing underneath except white garters. In another, Mr. Mora likens the villa to Michael Jackson’s house. “Wow, Neverland,” she answers.

IT is not always easy to translate between Italian and American sensibilities. There is no good English word for “veline,” the scantily clad Vanna White-like showgirls who smile and prance on television, doing dance numbers even in the middle of talk shows. And there is no word in Italian for accountability. The closest is “responsibilità” — responsibility — which lacks the concept that actions can carry consequences.

There is, however, an English word for Mr. Berlusconi’s television shows, and it is campy.The late-night program where Ms. Mahroug appeared, “Kalispera,” tapped into deep currents in Italian society — family, food, motherhood, nostalgia; randy old goats and leggy young blondes — and distorted them into a grotesque tableau.

After a segment in which the show’s golden retriever goes out clubbing in Milan and an interlude in which Mr. Signorini, in tapered plaid pants and a red sweater vest, danced the Charleston with another comely guest, it was time for the sit-down with Ms. Mahroug.

Beneath dramatic dim lighting, the 18-year-old said she had been introduced to Mr. Berlusconi by a friend who explained that Ms. Mahroug was going through a rough patch. “I told him everything in all sincerity,” Ms. Mahroug said of Mr. Berlusconi. “Except my name, age, and” — here she smiled a bit — “my country.”

If the classic definition of irony is a fundamental tension between what something is supposed to mean and what it actually means, between who is in on the joke and who is not, it is difficult to know if such a display is deeply ironic — or so far beyond irony as to be unironic.

Whatever it is, it is very Italian. This is, after all, the culture that invented the Baroque, with its trompe l’oeil ceilings, false doors, facades that disguise multiple layers and facades that disguise nothing at all. In his years in public life, Mr. Berlusconi has blurred the line between image and reality. Or rather, he has made a brilliant career on the fundamental Italian truth that image is reality.

In a video address broadcast last week, a quietly seething Mr. Berlusconi said prosecutors had violated the constitution and their treatment of his party guests had been “unworthy of a state of law.” “I’m serene, and you should be serene too, because the truth always wins,” he said. As to which truth — for that, the audience will just have to stay tuned.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/23/weekinreview/23donadio.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&sq=italy%20soap&st=cse&scp=1