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AHAHAHAH!! 28 maggio 2009 00:00
ma chi ti caga piu'"leonardo auro ecc", tanto ti dai gia' ragione da solo cambiando nik!!!
AHHAHAHAHA!!!
Mico 28 maggio 2009 00:00
io in effetti mio figlio non lo darei in mano ad uno che ha corrotto un avvocato per interesse personale e poi dopo esser diventato presidente del consiglio si è fatto una legge ad personam (lodo alfano) al solo scopo di non dover pagare i suoi conti con la giustizia.

praticamente ci irride tutta l'europa e sono sicuro anche i miei vicini di casa mi irriderebbero se sapessero che mio figlio è nelle sue mani.
www.ft.com/brusselsblog 28 maggio 2009 00:00
Berlusconi's adversaries, in and outside Italy, seethe with fury when they see how he gets away with it. Less than two weeks ago a Milan court ruled that David Mills, a British corporate lawyer jailed for accepting a $600,000 bribe in 1997, had given false testimony to protect the billionaire Berlusconi and his Fininvest holding company. In any other western European country, a scandal of these dimensions would have brought down the premier in less time than it takes to say "Papi". But not in Italy, where Berlusconi succeeded last year in ramming a bill through parliament that gave him immunity from prosecution.

Of course, the premier denies that he did anything wrong and says it's all a plot by leftwing judges and prosecutors to destroy his political career. This depressing ritual of accusation and counter-accusation between Berlusconi and the judiciary has been going on for many years and shows no sign of stopping.

In the court of public opinion, however, some may consider it surprising that Berlusconi has not been convicted of being one of the worst stewards of the Italian economy since 1945. His first, short-lived government in 1994 achieved nothing. His five-year spell in power from 2001 to 2006 was notable mainly for its failure to introduce the liberalising reforms that Italy desperately needs to make itself competitive in the eurozone. Now, he is presiding over a decline that the International Monetary Fund thinks may make Italy the only eurozone country to experience three consecutive years of recession, from 2008 to 2010.

Worst of all, Italy's public debt is set to soar to 116 per cent of gross domestic product by 2010, according to the European Commission. In other words, Italy will be back where it was in the late 1990s. Noemi or no Noemi, this is Berlusconi's real sin.

www.ft.com/brusselsblog
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