Former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi speaks
during a political rally in downtown Rome last week.
REUTERS/Max Rossi
Former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has triggered
outrage from Italy's political left with comments defending
fascist wartime leader Benito Mussolini at a ceremony
commemorating victims of the Nazi Holocaust.
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
combatting 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 Feb. 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
Faced by the onslaught of criticism, Berlusconi later issued
a statement saying he had always condemned dictatorships and
regretted not having spelled that out in his earlier remarks.
"There can be no misunderstanding about the fascist
dictatorship," he said, accusing the left of capitalising on
his earlier comments for cheap political gain.
However, 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.
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