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  • 8
    Mar
    2013
    2:15pm, EST

    Berlusconi 'bunga, bunga' trial delayed for eye condition

    Remo Casilli / Remo Casilli / Reuters, file

    Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi appears on a television show in Rome on Feb. 20.

    By Manuela D'Alessandro, Reuters

    MILAN — Italian judges on Friday postponed a hearing in former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's "bunga bunga" sex trial after the media mogul checked into hospital with an eye condition.

    The trial, on charges he had sex with an underage prostitute, is seen as the most damaging of three cases currently against him as he fights for his political future following last week's inconclusive election.


    The case was entering it final stages when his lawyers asked for an adjournment to allow him to get treatment.


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    Prosecutor Ilda Boccassini told the court she suspected the move was a delaying tactic and asked for an independent check on his condition.

    But Judge Giulia Turri and two colleagues accepted Berlusconi had a legitimate reason for a postponement and moved the hearing to Monday.

    A final ruling in the case had been expected on March 18 but it was not clear if the adjournment would cause a delay.

    Berlusconi has always denied any wrongdoing, and said on Thursday that all the charges against him were "judicial persecution... which re-emerges every time there are politically complex moments in the political life of our country."

    He fell short of a victory in last week's vote, even though he rallied his supporters and performed better than expected.

    The vote ended with a hung parliament and the president is still struggling to form a new government.

    Berlusconi has a condition that causes "pain, intolerance of light and disturbed vision" that is best treated in hospital, Berlusconi's personal doctor, Alberto Zangrillo, told reporters.

    "He's in day hospital treatment now, but he probably will spend the night as a precautionary measure." By law, the 76-year-old billionaire has a right to be present at all his trial hearings.

    On Monday, the prosecution in the sex trial said parties at Berlusconi's Milan villa were arranged for prostitution and were not the elegant dinners he suggested.

    The parties involved dinner, erotic "bunga bunga" dancing and then sex between aspiring female TV stars and invited guests, prosecutor Antonio Sangermano said.

    Lawyers for the owner of the country's biggest private broadcaster, Mediaset, have also asked that a hearing scheduled for Saturday in another trial be postponed because of his eye problem.

    In that trial, Berlusconi is appealing against a four-year jail sentence for tax fraud in connection with the purchase of broadcasting rights by his television network.

    Under Italian law, Berlusconi will not serve any jail time until the appeals process is exhausted, and a higher court could overturn the ruling.

    Berlusconi was convicted three times during the 1990s, before being either cleared by higher courts or benefiting from the statute of limitations by which cases expire if a final verdict is not reached within a given time period.

    On Thursday, an Italian court sentenced Berlusconi to one year in jail over the publication by his family's newspaper of a transcript of a leaked wiretap connected to a banking scandal in 2006.

    In that case, the statute of limitations for the charges expires in September, before the appeals process can be completed, legal sources said.

    5 comments

    I mean no disrespect, but maybe his eyes wore out from too much looking.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, berlusconi, milan
  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    10:46am, EDT

    Italy court sentences ex-premier Berlusconi to 4 years in prison

    Giorgio Cosulich / Getty Images file

    Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, shown here in April 2011, was sentenced Friday to four years in prison.

    By NBC News and wire reports

    Updated at 11:40 a.m. ET: MILAN -- An Italian court on Friday convicted former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of tax evasion and sentenced him to four years in prison.

    But the verdict did not mean that Berlusconi will go to prison anytime soon.

    In Italy, cases must pass two levels of appeal before the verdicts are final. Berlusconi is expected to appeal. He will not have to serve any time in jail until his final appeal is heard.


    Still, the conviction Friday was significant because it was the media mogul's first prison sentence in years of criminal probes.

    The verdict was almost certainly the final nail in the 76-year-old’s political coffin, two days after he announced he would not run for premier in upcoming elections.

    Berlusconi was not in the courtroom for the verdict.

    Berlusconi, along with other defendants convicted in the case, must deposit a total of €10 million ($13 million) into a court-ordered fund appeals, which could take years, proceed.

    Berlusconi stepped down as prime minister last November after Italy came under mounting market pressure to deal with its high debt load and Berlusconi failed to come up with persuasive financial reforms.

    Scheme involved rights to U.S. movies
    Prosecutors alleged that the defendants were behind a scheme to purchase the rights to broadcast U.S. movies on Berlusconi's private TV networks in his Mediaset empire through a series of offshore companies and had falsely declared the payments to avoid taxes.


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    A total of 11 people were on trial.

    Three were acquitted, including a close associate of Berlusconi, Fedele Confalonieri, chairman of Mediaset. Berlusconi and three others were convicted, including a Hollywood producer, Frank Agrama, who received a three-year sentence.

    Four defendants were cleared because statute of limitations had run out.

    Not the first Italian PM to be convicted
    Berlusconi is not the first former Italian premier to be convicted of criminal charges.

    From April: 'Burlesconi' sex scandal comes full circle

    Former Socialist Premier Bettino Craxi eluded an arrest warrant and turned up at his villa in Tunisia in 1994 after a court in Italy charged him in a massive corruption case. He was tried in absentia, convicted and sentenced to 8 1/2 years in prison, never returned to Italy and died in exile. Craxi was considered Berlusconi's mentor thanks to his opening to private television in Italy from a state monopoly.

    Former seven-time Christian Democrat premier, Giulio Andreotti, was convicted of involvement in a Mafia-murder. But he was cleared on appeal and never went to jail.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    In the same courthouse on Friday, another criminal trial against Berlusconi was held. He is charged in that case with paying for sex with an under-age teenager and trying to cover it up. He denies wrongdoing.

    Berlusconi has been tried numerous times for his business dealings. He has always denied wrongdoing and alleged that the cases were politically motivated. In each case to date, he has been cleared or seen the statute of limitations expire.

    NBC's Claudio Lavanga, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    52 comments

    He will never see prison. Prison is for people like us, the serfs and commoners, not them.

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    Explore related topics: italy, fraud, berlusconi, featured, milan
  • 16
    May
    2012
    4:57pm, EDT

    Italian university to switch to English-only classes

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    One of Italy’s leading universities will switch to teaching in the English language, saying the institution was left with “no other choice” in order to compete worldwide.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Politecnico di Milano announced it will offer most of its degree courses only in English as of 2014, the BBC reported. The decision has sparked protest among some professors, with one likening the move to a "dictatorship," according to the University World News.

    Politecnico di Milano, known for its architecture, engineering and science programs, has about 36,000 students.


    "Universities are in a more competitive world, if you want to stay with the other global universities -- you have no other choice," the BBC quoted the university's rector, Giovanni Azzone, as saying. "We strongly believe our classes should be international classes -- and the only way to have international classes is to use the English language."

    Nic Mitchell, a public relations consultant focused on higher education, told the BBC that more than 4,500 university courses are being taught in English in continental Europe.

    At least 285 professors signed a petition this week protesting the Politecnico di Milano decision, arguing the imposition of English as unconstitutional.

    “The point is that English is being imposed on students as a kind of linguistic dictatorship ... and what we might call ‘low-definition’ English (the English of conferences and so on) is also being confused with the ‘high-definition’ language of teaching," Politecnico Professor Emilio Matricciani said, according to the University World News.

    He added: "Speaking Italian to our countrymen is like watching a movie in color, high definition, very clear pictures. On the contrary, speaking English to them, even with our best effort, is, on the average, like watching a movie in black and white, with very poor definition, with blurred pictures."

    Word spread fast on social network sites, with people commenting in English and in Italian.

    “Beginning of the end for Italian. The Politecnico di Milano will teach only in English. Non scholae sed vitae discimus,” Dan McDougall posted on his Twitter account.

    Alex Morrison wrote: “Politecnico di Milano to teach all classes in English - what a great place to study - sign me up for a PhD now!”

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    37 comments

    You gotta love it - here in America everybody is speaking all kinds of languages, yet in other countries they do it and never look back.....why can't America just pass an English only law and stop all this nonsense: press 1 for english, 2 for spanish, etc. etc. etc.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, bbc, italian, milan, english-only, politecnico, azzone

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