The top editors of Corriere della Sera and La Stampa wrote in Monday's editions that they spoke with Berlusconi, and the premier is feeling bitter about Lario's revelations that she wants to split.
"Veronica will have to publicly apologize to me. And I don't know if that will be enough," Corriere quoted Berlusconi as saying,
The Milan daily says when it asked Berlusconi if he was thinking of patching up the couple's nearly 30-year-long relationship, the premier replied: "I don't believe so. I don't know if I want to this time."
Berlusconi was quoted as expressing annoyance with his wife, claiming this is the "third time in an election campaign that she plays a joke like this on me."
Lario's complaints last week about her husband's reported flirting with younger women comes as the conservative premier is working to keep his Freedom People's party strong in approaching European Parliament elections.
Berlusconi also has two children from a previous marriage.
Berlusconi claimed in the talks with the Italian newspapers that his wife "fell in a media trap" and that she wrongly believed that he had planned to back three young showgirls as candidates for the European elections.
"We're talking about three talented girls out of 72 candidates," Berlusconi told Corriere. "And what's wrong if they are also cute?"
Last week, Lario, a good-looking woman who generally shuns the limelight of her husband's wealth and office, also made known she was irked by her husband's attending the 18th-birthday party of the daughter of a friend of his in Naples.
She claimed that Berlusconi never attended the 18th-birthday parties of his own children.
"I am worried and displeased," La Stampa quoted the premier as saying about Lario's desire for a divorce becoming public knowledge. "I had tried to hold together a difficult situation for love of the children, but now it's finished. I don't see the conditions any more to go on."
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