ROME (Reuters) – Silvio Berlusconi was at the centre of a new storm yesterday after a private phone call in which he made assertions about President Giorgio Napolitano was aired on television, prompting a furious reaction from the president.
A current affairs programme on private channel La 7 broadcast a phone tap in which Berlusconi said he had been informed that Napolitano had exerted influence on Italy’s top appeals court in a case involving Berlusconi’s media empire.
Berlusconi said he had heard that Napolitano called the court to find out the verdict before it had been announced and then told the court to re-convene, finally resulting in a more negative verdict for Berlusconi.
The 88-year-old president issued a fiercely worded statement saying that what Berlusconi said he had been told was “simply another delirious, vulgar and slanderous invention regarding regarding the head of state.”
Berlusconi’s lawyer, Niccolo Ghedini said the decision to broadcast the conversation was “a violation of Italy’s constitutional principles.” Berlusconi’s spokesman was not available for comment.
Earlier this month the appeals court ordered Berlusconi’s family holding company Fininvest to pay a 494-million euro ($668-million) fine to a rival company, CIR, stemming from its improper acquisition of publisher Mondadori more than 20 years ago.
Berlusconi can ill afford to alienate Napolitano, who is the supreme arbiter of Italian politics and is the only person who can dissolve parliament and call new elections, as Berlusconi wants.