MILAN (Reuters) – Writers, intellectuals and a former president of the constitutional court rallied in Milan yesterday against scandal-hit Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, accusing him of wrecking Italy’s international reputation.
Some 9,000 people packed a concert hall on the outskirts of Milan and hundreds more watched on video screens outside as authors Roberto Saviano and Umberto Eco laid into Berlusconi, 74, who has been engulfed by a sex scandal.
“There is an Italy that has the right and the duty to make itself seen and to raise its voice, an Italy that believes in rules and legality,” said Saviano, whose novel Gomorra about the Naples mafia, won him international fame.
He called on Italy to rebel against “a premier who, suffering from a senile sexual obsession, pays under-aged girls, lies to the state and runs from the courts.”
Berlusconi has resisted calls to quit over the scandal that has made a household name of “Ruby,“ a teenage nightclub dancer he is accused by prosecutors of having paid for sex while she was under 18, the earliest legal age for prostitution in Italy.
Prosecutors also accuse Berlusconi of abusing his position to have her released from police custody where she was held for suspected theft, falsely telling officials she was the niece of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Berlusconi has denied any wrongdoing in connection with the accusations driving a judicial investigation into the scandal. He says he is being persecuted by politically motivated magistrates.
Growing numbers of protests are springing up around Italy, often organised spontaneously on the Internet, although polls show that so far Berlusconi’s conservative voter base has largely shrugged off the affair.
Around 3,000 people marched through Florence yesterday banging pots and pans and carrying placards reading, “Italy is not a brothel” and “Hands off our dignity.”
At the rally in Milan, Berlusconi’s home city and electoral heartland, author and philosopher Eco, best known for his 1980 book The Name of the Rose, said it was a duty to oppose Berlusconi, saying too few had opposed Mussolini under Fascism.
“We are here to defend the honour of Italy,” he said.
Prominent television journalist Gad Lerner said Italy had become “an absolute anomaly” and in any normal democracy “the prime minister would have resigned long ago after committing the acts Berlusconi has committed.“
For weeks Italian newspapers have featured extracts of prosecutors’ evidence, mainly intercepted phone conversations among young women they say received cash, jewellery and, in some cases, free housing from the billionaire media tycoon.
Another protest is planned today outside Berlusconi’s sumptuous villa near Milan where prosecutors say his parties took place featuring sex games with young women paid to attend. The organisers say protesters will throw condoms at the villa.