Oman Daily Observer

Ban from office: Berlusconi takes fight to European court

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STRASBOURG, France: Lawyers for Silvio Berlusconi argued on Wednesday at the European Court of Human Rights against his ban from holding public office, hoping for a green light that will allow him to run for prime minister at Italy’s election early next year.

In a hearing before the Strasbourg court, the four-times prime minister appealed against his banishment from holding public office that followed a 2013 tax fraud conviction. It is supposed to remain in place until 2019.

The billionair­e media tycoon was widely written off after he quit as prime minister in 2011 amid a scandal involving his “bunga bunga” parties, while Italian bond yields surged to unsustaina­ble levels at the height of the euro zone debt crisis.

However, the Berlusconi has made a 81-year-old remarkable comeback after open heart surgery last year and his Forza Italia (Go Italy!) party is now the lynchpin of a centre- right coalition which leads in opinion polls ahead of the election.

The “Berlusconi versus Italy” case is being heard by 17 judges who make up the court’s Grand Chamber, which is used for particular­ly important and complex matters. Berlusconi has hired a top London law firm to represent him.

At the end of the hearing Edward Fitzgerald, a lawyer for Berlusconi, told reporters an “injustice” had taken place in the Italian courts.

“Basic procedural guarantees were lacking for doing something as massive and draconian as depriving an elected official of his electoral mandate, and the people who elected him of their right to be represente­d by the person they chose.”

The court will not issue a verdict on Wednesday, and even if it eventually decides in favour of Berlusconi the ruling may not come in time for him to run in the election, which must be held by May next year.

In an interview on Wednesday with la Repubblica newspaper, Berlusconi said he would still be campaignin­g for his party whether he can stand for office or not.

“Irrespecti­ve of whether I can stand, I’ll be a player and I’ll bring the centrerigh­t to power,” he said. Berlusconi was not present at the hearing.

Berlusconi argues that because the tax fraud took place many years before the 2013 Italian law that bars him from running for office was passed, the legislatio­n is being applied retroactiv­ely and is therefore illegitima­te.

Berlusconi received a four-year prison sentence in August 2013 for organising a complex scheme to illegally lower the tax bill of his Mediaset media company.

Three of the four years were immediatel­y waived due to an amnesty to relieve prison overcrowdi­ng, and he was allowed to serve the remaining year in community service, helping out in an old people’s home.

 ?? — AFP ?? Lawyers of Silvio Berlusconi (From L), Edward Fitzgerald, Bruno Nascimbene, and Andrea Saccucci prepare prior to a Grand Chamber hearing at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, eastern France, on Wednesday.
— AFP Lawyers of Silvio Berlusconi (From L), Edward Fitzgerald, Bruno Nascimbene, and Andrea Saccucci prepare prior to a Grand Chamber hearing at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, eastern France, on Wednesday.
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