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<http://coto2.wordpress.com/2011/06/03/italy-bans-nukes-and-water-privatization/>
 Italy bans nukes and water privatization 


 <http://coto2.wordpress.com/author/coto2admin/> coto2admin | June 3, 2011 at 
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<http://coto2.wordpress.com/?tag=legitimate-impediment-law> legitimate 
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<http://coto2.wordpress.com/?cat=184> Environment,  
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>From bad to worse as grip on nation slips further out of Berlusconi's hands By 
>Paola Totaro Sydney Morning Herald They say bad things come in threes and for 
>Silvio Berlusconi, Italy's Prime Minister, the week brought the full quota of 
>political misfortune. On Monday Mr Berlusconi, 74, once seen as untouchable 
>and invincible, witnessed [...]


talians, not government, to decide on nukes and water privatization


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http://coto2.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/nonukes.gif?w=200&h=205From bad to 
worse as grip on nation slips further out of Berlusconi’s hands
By Paola Totaro
Sydney Morning Herald 
<http://www.smh.com.au/world/from-bad-to-worse-as-grip-on-nation-slips-further-out-of-berlusconis-hands-20110603-1fky3.html>
 

They say bad things come in threes and for Silvio Berlusconi, Italy’s Prime 
Minister, the week brought the full quota of political misfortune.

On Monday Mr Berlusconi, 74, once seen as untouchable and invincible, witnessed 
Italy’s regional governments, including his home city of Milan, fall to a 
phalanx of communist mayors, some of them former lawyers and anti-corruption 
prosecutors – the very types he most hates.

Just 24 hours later, amid TV pictures of 50,000 people celebrating the 
”liberation of Milan” in Piazza Duomo, a trio of inscrutable women judges 
listened to the nation’s most expensive lawyers begin Mr Berlusconi’s defence 
against accusations of paid sex with an under-age nightclub dancer.

The ink on that morning’s front pages was barely dry when the country’s Appeals 
Court landed what some believe will turn out to be the knockout hit, announcing 
a controversial referendum on nuclear power, water privatisation and the 
so-called legitimate impediment law 
<http://www.theworld.org/2011/01/berlusconi-fate-hangs-in-balance/>  – 
originally planned for the same weekend as the regional polls – would go ahead 
on June 12 and 13.

Mr Berlusconi’s government, a powerful advocate of the atomic industry, had 
planned to embark on a big new building program from 2014 with the aim of 
producing 25 per cent of the country’s electricity needs with atomic energy by 
2030. Italy has had a ban on any industry expansion since 1987, when the 
electorate, deeply suspicious of nuclear power after Chernobyl, voted for a 
moratorium. Fearful of a similar backlash in the wake of the Fukushima 
disaster, Mr Berlusconi has waged an unstinting battle against the plebiscite, 
even offering a suspension of his nuclear plans in April in an effort to ride 
out controversy.

However, atomic power may well turn out to be the least of Mr Berlusconi’s 
problems because the referendum will also ask Italians to vote on another, 
explosive issue: whether the Prime Minister – now on trial for fraud as well as 
sex crimes – should be allowed to boycott court for 18 months so he can 
concentrate solely on his political responsibilities. In other words, does his 
leadership constitute a ”legitimate impediment” to his attendance at court. Il 
Cavaliere himself, ever defiant, insists that no matter what happened at 
regional polls, ”the government will forge on”.

In court this week his lawyers listed 16 reasons why the trial should not 
continue in Milan but in a parliamentary tribunal. Mr Berlusconi, they argue, 
was ”convinced” that Ruby, the Moroccan showgirl, was the niece of the then 
Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, when he made his phone call to have her 
freed from police custody.

Tactics to stall and delay – and push the case into a constitutional court – 
could buy Berlusconi precious time.

But history has shown that Milan has often been a litmus test for Italy’s mood, 
signalling political unrest and a desire for change well before the rest of the 
country.

Problematic for the future is that the Northern League, the government’s 
coalition partner, copped a bruising, too.

The League leader, Umberto Bossi, has increasingly distanced himself from Mr 
Berlusconi this year although his party’s rhetoric, combining a mix of 
populist, region-centric slogans with intolerance of Islam, formed a prominent 
plank of the right’s losing campaign for Milan.

For many in the Northern League, poor results in the first round of the vote 
suggested that continuing ties with Mr Berlusconi were likely to spell doom. In 
the second round last weekend, the key city of Novara was lost, cementing 
anxiety and heralding poisonous times between the partners.

And so it is that the leader lauded as Italy’s most popular postwar prime 
minister, the maverick, anti-bureaucracy, self-made, 
couldn’t-give-a-damn-for-the-establishment billionaire who promised to drag the 
nation out of the banana-republic quagmire it found itself in the 1980s, has 
himself become a figure of tragi-comedy the world over. Italians, grappling 
with hefty public debt and rising unemployment, find themselves having to spend 
an estimated extra €300 million ($407 million) of public funds on a plebiscite 
that should have sent them to the polling booth just once last month.

For Silvio Berlusconi, bad things might not stop at three.

 



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