MILAN, (Reuters) – An Italian judge has ordered Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to stand trial in April on charges of paying an underage girl for sex and abuse of office, although there seemed no immediate risk the scandal would force him out.
Following weeks of scandal that have shaken his struggling centre-right government, trial was set on Tuesday to start in a criminal court in Milan on April 6, according to a statement from the office of the city’s chief judge.
Berlusconi is not obliged to appear in person before the panel of three judges on that day, nor is there any legal obstacle to his continuing to hold office throughout any trial proceedings, which could take years before any conviction.
Throughout several other legal cases, the 74-year-old premier has kept the loyalty of lieutenants in his own party, which he set up after making his fortune in business. There has been no open push from his own allies for him to stand down.
“We did not expect anything different,” Piero Longo, one of Berlusconi’s lawyers who sits in parliament for the ruling PDL party, told reporters after the decision was announced.
Yet the decision is perhaps the most serious political blow so far to Berlusconi, who has faced mounting public criticism as he tries to shore up a precarious majority in parliament.
A survey this week in the left-leaning La Repubblica newspaper showed that almost 50 percent of Italians believe the accusations against him are true, although as many believe that even if he is guilty, he will not be punished.
“He should resign because this situation has become unbearable,” said Pierluigi Bersani, head of the opposition Democratic Party.
But Justice Minister Angelino Alfano retorted: “What happened to someone being presumed innocent?”
Italy’s largest Catholic magazine, Famiglia Cristiana, said on its website that Berlusconi had perhaps met his nemesis because the judge who indicted him and the judges who will hear the case are all women.