Silvio Berlusconi, former Italian prime minister and media mogul, dies
at 86
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[June 12, 2023]
By Emilio Parodi, Elvira Pollina
MILAN (Reuters) -Silvio Berlusconi, the billionaire media mogul and
former Italian prime minister who transformed the nation's politics with
polarising policies and often alarmed his allies with his brazen
remarks, died on Monday aged 86.
Berlusconi, Italy's longest-serving premier who counted Russian
President Vladimir Putin as a friend and gained notoriety for his "bunga
bunga" sex parties, had suffered from leukaemia and recently developed a
lung infection.
He died at Milan's San Raffaele hospital, where he had been since
Friday, at around 0730 GMT. Four of his five children and his brother
Paolo had been at his bedside, ANSA reported shortly before his death
was announced.
Berlusconi's Forza Italia party is part of Prime Minister Giorgia
Meloni's right-wing coalition, and although he himself did not have a
role in government, his death is likely to destabilise Italian politics
in the coming months.
His business empire also faces an uncertain future. He never publicly
indicated who would take full charge of his MFE company following his
death, even though his eldest daughter Marina is expected to play a
prominent role.
His passing was mourned by allies and rivals alike.
"We fought, won, lost many battles with him, and also for him we will
bring home the goals that we had jointly set ourselves. Farewell Silvio,"
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said.
Enrico Letta, a former center-left premier, wrote on Twitter:
"Berlusconi made the history of our country. His death marks one of
those moments in which everyone, whether or not they backed his choices,
feel affected."
Shares in MFE's A- and B-shares jumped by as much as 10% after
Berlusconi's death was reported, with traders on the Milan bourse saying
it could pave the way for the company to be sold or merged with a rival.
After building a television empire in the 1980s, Berlusconi threw
himself into politics in 1994 and almost immediately became prime
minister. He held the post four times - 1994-5, 2001-5, 2005-6 and
2008-11 - despite multiple legal scandals.
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Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
answers a journalist's questions during a news conference in Rome,
Italy, December 30, 2004. REUTERS/Tony Gentile/File Photo
He stepped down as prime minister for the last time in 2011, with
Italy close to a Greek-style debt crisis and his own reputation
sullied by allegations that he had hosted "bunga bunga" sex parties
with underage women, something he denied.
He was acquitted on appeal on all charges related to the parties,
but he was convicted for tax fraud in 2013, leading to a five-year
ban on holding public office.
Despite his health woes and the relentless court battles, Berlusconi
refused to relinquish control of Forza Italia and returned to
frontline politics, winning a seat in the European Parliament in
2019 and in the Italian Senate last year.
While presenting himself as an elder statesman, he continued to fuel
controversy, most notably with his refusal to blame his old friend
Putin for the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, saying Moscow had only
wanted to put "decent people" in charge of Kyiv.
There is no obvious successor to take the reins at Forza Italia,
which won 8% of the vote in 2022, and allies and foes will want to
poach his loyal electorate, who stuck with Berlusconi through thick
and thin.
Perennially suntanned and vigorously promoted by his own media
companies, Berlusconi brought his great skills as a salesman and
communicator to the staid world of politics, offering a bright,
optimistic outlook that voters lapped up.
He also had a sense of humour that often landed him in trouble, most
recently last December when he told players of his Monza soccer team
the would bring them "a bus of whores" if they managed to beat a top
Serie A rival.
(Reporting by Emilio Parodi and Elvira Pollina; Writing by Alvise
Armellini; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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