Saturday, May 28, 2011

When Berlusconi calls Barack Obama the "dictatorship of judges left" in Italy

Silvio Berlusconi took advantage of the G8 in Deauville, Thursday 26 and Friday 27 May, to plead his case personally to Barack Obama. On the occasion of an apparent break in the talks on Thursday, the Italian Prime Minister caused a brief tete-a-tete with Bush. The meeting was filmed content that exchange of two minutes was made public.

Mr. Berlusconi, who appears in court in several trials in Italy - including abuse of power and incitement to prostitution of a minor - told the U.S. president: "We introduced the reform and justice for us is fundamental because right now we have almost a dictatorship of judges left. " Barack Obama before an impassive, shaking his head slightly toward the translator, Silvio Berlusconi continues: "I have been thirty and a trial and I've always been acquitted." The insistence of the Italian request to the president of the world's greatest power on an internal matter, if not personal, at a summit devoted to major international issues like the war in Libya, the Cavaliere is mockery, Friday Press the peninsula.

Many newspapers will show virulent, like La Repubblica wrote: "This is a Prime Minister who used internationally to harm his country, discrediting the leaders from other major democracies." It is "a sign of deep grief that we must try to understand", for his part tried to explain the Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.

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