Sunday, January 27, 2013
Berlusconi defends Mussolini, draws outrage from political left
By James Mackenzie
ROME (Reuters) - Former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi triggered outrage from Italy's political left on Sunday with comments defending fascist wartime leader Benito Mussolini at a ceremony commemorating victims of the Nazi Holocaust.
Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi appears as a guest on the RAI television show Porta a Porta (Door to Door) in Rome January 9, 2013. REUTERS/Remo Casilli |
Speaking at the margins of the event in Milan, Berlusconi said Mussolini had been wrong to follow Nazi Germany's lead in passing anti-Jewish laws but that he had in other respects been a good leader.
"It's difficult now to put yourself in the shoes of people who were making decisions at that time," said Berlusconi, who is campaigning for next month's election at the head of a coalition that includes far-right politicians whose roots go back to Italy's old fascist party.
"Obviously the government of that time, out of fear that German power might lead to complete victory, preferred to ally itself with Hitler's Germany rather than opposing it," he said.
"As part of this alliance, there were impositions, including combating and exterminating Jews," he told reporters. "The racial laws were the worst fault of Mussolini as a leader, who in so many other ways did well," he said, referring to laws passed by Mussolini's fascist government in 1938.
Although Mussolini is known outside Italy mostly for the alliance with Nazi Germany, his government also paid for major infrastructure projects as well as welfare for supporters.
Berlusconi's comments overshadowed Sunday's commemoration of thousands of Jews and others deported from Italy to the Nazi death camps of eastern Europe. They were condemned as "disgusting" by the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), which is leading in the polls ahead of the February 24-25 election.
"Our republic is based on the struggle against Nazi fascism and these are intolerable remarks which are incompatible with leadership of democratic political forces," said Marco Meloni, the PD's spokesman for institutional affairs.
Antonio Ingroia, a former anti-mafia magistrate campaigning at the head of a separate left-wing coalition, said Berlusconi was "a disgrace to Italy".
AMBIGUOUS
It was not the first time Berlusconi has defended Mussolini, whose status in Italy remains deeply ambiguous 67 years after he was executed by communist partisans while trying to flee to Switzerland in April, 1945.
Many Italian politicians, including the speaker of the Lower House of parliament, Gianfranco Fini, come from the ranks of the old Italian Social Movement (MSI) which grew out of the fascist party, although Fini and others have renounced the far right.
Others, including Francesco Storace, Berlusconi's candidate for president of the Lazio region, have stayed true to what they see as the "social-right" tradition of the fascist movement.
Monuments to Mussolini, who came to power in 1922, still dot many Italian cities, including Rome, where a column to Il Duce stands close to the city's main football stadium, within a stone's throw of the foreign ministry.
Although never as fervently anti-semitic as his Nazi allies, Mussolini's government persecuted Italy's Jewish population, which was then estimated to number about 40,000, according to the Jewish Contemporary Documentation Centre in Milan.
The 1938 laws imposed oppressive restrictions on Jews and some 10,000 are estimated to have been deported from Italy between September 1943 and March 1945. Most of them died in the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland.
While anti-semitic behaviour has not been as prominently reported in Italy in recent years as in neighbouring countries such as France, acts ranging from anti-Jewish graffiti to chants at football matches occur periodically.
"We must be very careful to ensure that these sparks, which recur every now and then, cannot bring back tragedies which humanity should not suffer again," outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti said on Sunday.
(Editing by Louise Ireland)
- PKR to postpone party elections
- Malaysia a favourite of Muslim travellers
- Storify: UEFA Champions League 2012/2013
- Chua: Cops right to act against those inciting racial hatred
- DPM: Turning BN into a single party must be evaluated in detail
- All religions practise good teachings

- Syndicate linked to IC deal busted
- Painting of merry old couple covered up to prevent accident at Chew Jetty
- Barisan mulls name change as part of its evolution
- Trio walk free after court turns down remand request
- Ministry: Marriage should not be way out for suspected rapists
- EC: Blackout photo is a fake
- Dance groups laud move to include more races in shows
- DPM: Call for Tamil and Mandarin classes needs study
- Vujicic finds magic in helping youths
- Politics of development pays dividend
- A thematic play seen
- Sarawak counters hogging the limelight
- Getting GST acceptance will be tough
- A yen for the unloved dollar standard
- Bitten by the music bug
- Up close and personal with Datuk Richard Curtis
- Make our pastime profitable
- Should citizens boycott
- Tasty Facebook party poopers
- First-half 2013 figure seen to surpass that of the same period last year
- More can be done to promote private retirement scheme
- Tycoon may be planning IPO of football club Cardiff City
- MFEA sees sales of home-made furniture abroad declining 10%
- YKGI eyes Indonesian, Thai markets
- Squash: Matthew offers a message with a warning
- Golf: Molinari leads but Ryder Cup colleagues crash out
- Tennis: Djokovic blocks Nadal path to Paris super eight
- MSSM meet: 15 records in five days augur well for M’sian athletics
- Indonesian Rexy's advise to M'sian team: Stick together as a family
- Yongbo: Beat us if you can, not good for China to win all the time
- Thai Ratchanok wins many hearts with her gritty display
- Squash:M'sian Nicol beats New Zealander in straight sets to reach last four
- Basketball: Warriors have no problem taming Dragons in Jakarta
- National hockey juniors fare badly in tourney
- MHC: No way we will scrap age-group tournaments
- Selangor Hockey Association to hold two-day trials
- Youngster Zaqhwan surprises himself with a new lap record
- Woman Natasha racer bids for first MSS win with her father
- Australian Marques leads at 111th Malaysian Amateur Open (MAO)
- Chua: Cops right to act against those inciting racial hatred
- Malaysia a favourite of Muslim travellers
- Trio walk free after court turns down remand request
- Robber shot dead after picking on wrong ‘victim’
- Painting of merry old couple covered up to prevent accident at Chew Jetty
- DPM: Turning BN into a single party must be evaluated in detail
- EC: Blackout photo is a fake
- Syndicate linked to IC deal busted
- Ministry: Marriage should not be way out for suspected rapists
- All religions practise good teachings
- Living through your midlife
- Malaysia a favourite of Muslim travellers
- Who has the better chance of bagging that high-salary post?
- Sarawak counters hogging the limelight
- Klang Valley a haven for UOA Dev
- More can be done to promote private retirement scheme
- Politics of development pays dividend
- Ex-steward gets to set aside default judgment
- Robber shot dead after picking on wrong ‘victim’
- Painting of merry old couple covered up to prevent accident at Chew Jetty

