Articles by: Judith Harris

  • Facts & Stories

    The Silly Season Sweeps Italy

    ROME – This peak of summer holidays is what the media pros call “the silly season,” when reporters are allowed a long leash for gossip in the absence of hard news. Ferragosto – the name derives from the original Feriae Augusti summer festival proclaimed by the Emperor Augustus – is a major holiday celebrated on August 15, and falls this year on a Wednesday.

    On that day all of Italy shuts down, and streets are deserted, unless one counts the hundreds of thousands of tourists wandering the streets of the cities and seeking, without much luck, a cup of coffee. One break for them this year: Roman museums will remain open, a genuine novelty for the holiday. Otherwise, all is quiet, for, as the Romans say to justify the total shut-down, “Siamo sotto ferragosto” (We’re under Ferragosto).

    But fires are breaking out and wearing out the firemen. In Rome’s Montemario two Romanians were arrested for arson, caught while setting fire to a sheet, which they were throwing into the undergrowth. Fires near Rome also meant that a suburban train line blocked passengers aboard it for seven hours. There is no doubt that the spate of fires is the work of pyromaniacs.

    The torrid Roman heat, with day after day in the nineties, has also meant that the horses in whose carts tourists traditionally toured Rome, called “Botticelle,”  were ordered to stay home for two days this week after one horse collapsed from heat stroke in the middle of the street. A century-old umbrella pine was similarly suffering from the heat wave, which was formally named “Nerone” (Nero) by meteorologists, similarly keeled over in the middle of a street, terrifying passersby. 

    The city streets, in fact, are surprisingly crowded during this summer of serious recession, for only four out of ten Italians are taking a serious vacation break. Nevertheless, the day of Ferragosto is sacred both to the Catholic Church as the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and to the families who flee their overheated homes in apartment blocks for the seaside, any seaside. The economic fallout brings visitors accustomed to grander vacations to the more humble holiday spots, like our own lovely Lake Bracciano. I have always enjoyed its homespun, family-style beaches, where families arrive with food hampers, tables, chairs, cell phones, radios, fold-out bicycles, floating gadgets, and granny. Quite different from all this was the woman in a rather imposing car who stopped me on the lakefront today to ask: “Where is the bathing establishing on the seaside?” Bathing establishment? Seaside? Perhaps she took a wrong turn. 

    So far Premier Mario Monti has not. He offended former Premier Silvio Berlusconi by saying that the spread would have been far higher if Berlusconi had stayed on. Berlusconi, needless to say, maintains the opposite, and was offended. Monti fudged in a more or less apologetic manner. Similarly, he took issue for the first time with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, triggering a brief exchange of fire along the lines of “they always were Nazis” vs “why should we Germans pay for Italian ineptitude?” To us onlookers, the two incidents do not appear to be gaffes. Instead they suggest that Monti has gathered confidence in his own political, as well as financial, savvy, as early elections in November appear ever less likely.

    During his nine months in office Monti has already survived an extraordinarily large number of votes of confidence – 34, or almost one a week. This week’s accompanied the passage of spending review measures, after which Chamber and Senate shut down for the rest of summer. Whereas any formal talk of an emergency “great coalition” is still anathema here, these confidence votes were granted to Monti by just such a coalition, formed by unlikely bedfellows: Berlusconi’s rightist Liberty Party (PdL), Pier Luigi Bersani’s left-leaning Partito Democratico (PD) plus middle-of-the-roaders like the Catholic Pier Ferdinando Casini. 

    Despite their cohesion in Parliamentary votes, the stresses and strains on those parties show, and this appears to be an important reason for Monti’s new-look, peacock-feather display of personal power. The in-fighting among the partners shows no sign of cooling down in the torrid meteorological and political heat. Berlusconi announced he will return to politics, then drew back, and has now said, in an interview with the French leftist newspaper Liberation, that he will return to active politics if the people demand it. What has actually been demanded was Berlusconi’s presence in a Palermo court house August 13 to testify against his cohort Marcello Dell’Utri over a huge payment Berlusconi allegedly made to Dell’Utri, in what inquiring magistrates believe was a case of blackmail. Berlusconi will not, however, be able to testify in Sicily that day because he will be in France, in a villa owned by his eldest daughter, businesswoman Marina Berlusconi. Siamo sotto Ferragosto. 

    Just returned from a friendly visit to Vladimir Putin in Russia, Berlusconi is expected, after Ferragosto, to head for his fabulous villa at Porto Rotondo, in Sardinia. Is he worrying over the holidays about the Milan court case involving Ruby Heart-Stealer, the underage girl he is accused of seducing? No, Berlusconi told Liberation. “I’ve always been acquitted and will be this time too.” The case was just one more example of the political persecution of which he has been a victim, he added.

    Among the other politicians, the newly scandal-plagued Roberto Formigoni of the Catholic right wing will spend the holiday in Sardinia. The increasingly agitated former magistrate Antonio Di Pietro returns to his native Molise; Di Pietro is working hard to distance himself from Bersani and the mainstream left, as if trying to out-Grillo Beppe Grillo in style and personalized appeal. Italy’s most prominent gay politician, Nichi Vendola, president of the Southern Region of Apulia (Puglia), will not leave that region, where Vendola just announced his intention to run for prime minister in the next national general election. The announcement excited sufficient interest worldwide that an Indian Muslim website ran the news, adding that Vendola speaks with a lisp and wears an earring (!) The Times of India also ran a piece on Vendola’s decision, see here.

    Given this summer’s air of crisis, Premier Monti has asked his entire cabinet and undersecretaries to go on holiday no more than one hour’s distance from Rome, so as to be within shouting distance in case the roof falls in. Monti himself will spend a few days in a house (“the same he usually rents,” his press aide specified) in Switzerland. 

    No such fiat limits Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno’s vacation, which will be spent in Los Angeles, while Lazio’s president Renata Polverini has deserted her region’s beaches, lakes and archaeological parks for the tourist port of Capalbio, in Tuscany. 

  • Facts & Stories

    Gore Vidal's Love Affair with Italy

    ROME - For over three decades Gore Vidal, who died Tuesday of pneumonia at age 86 in Los Angeles, spent six months a year in Italy. He and his partner, jazz singer Howard Auster, spent the colder Italian months in a roomy penthouse apartment whose terrace overlooked the ancient temple ruins at Largo Argentina in Rome. "And what better place to watch the end of the world?" Gore would say, in the world-weary voice he adopted, but which did not quite conceal the fact that he was, ever and always, an idealist.

    Summer months were spent at his sprawling villa "La Rondinaia" - the Swallow's Nest -  in the magnificent southern village of Ravello, at cliffside high above the sea. In Ravello, he said in 1977, four years after buying the villa, the locals "still speak of us as the 'two English sculptors.'" But most of the time he was already "a local icon, pointed out to tourists just like the thousand-year-old castle. Everybody comes to say hello to the Maestro, and I talk to the Monsignore in the piazza." With a Ravello priest he served on the Ravello booster council. And among his other Ravello friends was a retired English clergyman whose large family was so attractive that, as Vidal admitted, they made him long, "just once," to have a couple of sturdy sons of his own.  

    Every morning in Ravello Vidal walked down the cliff road to Amalfi to buy a half dozen Italian daily newspapers and an espresso in a cafe, before taking the bus back up to Ravello. Back at home Vidal became lord of all he surveyed - the distant sea, Paestum on its peninsula, the lemon trees, the shimmering light, the swallows that gave their name to the villa. Life at Ravello was "creatively boring," the day ending with a pre-dinner game of backgammon with Howard on the evenings (rare) when they were not entertaining guests, who, at different times, included Britain's Princess Margaret and Jackie Onassis, to whom Vidal was related by his mother's marriage to her father, Hugh D. Auchincloss.

    Vidal already knew Italy when he came to live here in 1973. Indeed his family had an Italian connection, and he twice visited Forni a Voltri in Friuli, home of his ancestors from about 1586 to 1779. Originally a Romanischer family, they came to Friuli from Feldkirch, in Austria. "A Vidal then left Friuli to return to Feldkirch, where he bought back Vidalhaus; it was his son, my great-grandfather, who came to the United States in 1848. We were apothecaries for more than five hundred years, and I suppose that the Vidals in the Veneto who make the soap are remnants of the family who stayed on in Italy. I love Friuli...."

    For that matter, he loved all of Italy, even though he never spoke Italian well. But then, as he said, "I write in English, after all. I read Italian easily, but I speak it with difficulty because I think in English and to translate swiftly what I am - I hope - swiftly thinking is hard work. Mind you, I have trouble reading Gadda, but Paese Sera, l'Unità, Messaggero, Repubblica, Corriere della Sera are the papers that I generally read, and are not difficult. But then I am old school: I was brought up in Latin."

    He was proud that Federico Fellini had given him a role in his film Roma, where he played himself. He had already written most of the film Ben Hur, "happily without credit," around 1957 at Cinecitta'. And although saying that he admired the works ("some of them") of Marco Bellocchio and Michelangelo Antonioni, as well as those of Fellini, he said he preferred not to work with anyone other than Fellini because "the cultural differences are... how to be tactful? too great."

    "The Italian character [his underscoring] has a good deal of strength of a sort that the American character lacks. The Italian means to survive, at any cost. The American survives, but there is often too high a cost," he once told me. "Left to themselves, the Italians work out a fine balance between anarchy and order. When times are bad—or good—the balance shifts this way or that. But the nice balance, sooner or later, is restored. Fundamentally, Italians hate both anarchy and order. This is very human."

    He could be disenchanted over relations between the two nations, as he wrote me in 1980 from his home in California. "After the war a good deal of American money was given to rebuild Italy, and that was a good thing even if the Mafia and/or the politicians got too large a commission. Since then, I can't think of any American institution that contributes much of anything to Italy. I suppose that the fleet at Gaeta, and the air force at Vicenza, serve as a deterrent to Soviet ambition." And then he softened, recalling the wonders of the American Academy, where he had done research for his novel Julian, adding: "And I suspect that even those Italians who do not love America sometimes have nightmares of Tito dead and Soviet troops staring hungrily at Trieste and points south."

    Wherever he was, Gore Vidal loved being Gore Vidal - a guerrilla fighter who used words like a bazooka. Or at least he loved himself most of the time. "I get so monstrously bored with myself," he once remarked to me. "Once I pretended to be this famous orchestra conductor. For weeks I went around being him. Later I met him. I didn't like him."

    He had no objection to praise. Once he showed me an article he was writing about Italy. "May I make an observation?" I asked hesitantly. No, he said, and that was that. Later I pointed out to him that at least three of his books ended in acts of violence: the rape in The City and the Pillar, another rape in Myra Breckinridge and the bomb blast in Kalki. "Oh?" he said, as if he had not noticed this. "Well, then, I had better not stop writing."

    He was proud as a peacock when the city of Ravello made him an honorary citizen. All Vidal's guests attending the citizenship ceremony, performed by the Ravello mayor, received a basket of lemons harvested from Vidal's own trees. The previous evening was celebrated with a trattoria dinner where, seated around the long table under the stars, were Italo Calvino, Luigi Barzini and Vidal's other close friends. The conversation was so rapid-fire that, seated in my corner, I could not keep up enough to make notes, as I often did when I was with Vidal. Still, I recall Calvino agreeing with me that Vidal's Duluth, written in 1983 and snubbed by U.S. critics, such as the New York Times' Christopher Lehmann-Haupt (the novel has the "usual apocalyptic indictment of the human race," he wrote), was in its way a masterpiece.

    And so was Gore Vidal.

  • Facts & Stories

    Palermo and its Mafia revisited

    ROME - In February 1986 literally hundreds of reporters converged upon Palermo for the opening of the so-called "Maxi Trial," whose legal framework had been brilliantly crafted by inquiring magistrate Giovanni Falcone together with prosecutor Paolo Borsellino and any number of less famous but equally brave policemen. The most far-reaching prosecution of the Sicilian Mafia in history, the trial would bring 360 convictions of the 475 indicted.

    For the occasion, a new cement bunker-like courthouse was built with a tunnel connecting it to the prison. Just before the trial opened, I went into an apartment building overlooking the bunker, to ask Sicilian citizens what they thought of the proceedings. I was taken aback by the answer, which was, "I don't know what goes on in there."

    But what I considered the bunker-blind were right, and in fact not alone in not knowing what was going on. Why, for instance, by 1992, after barely six years, would only 60 of those convicted remain in prison? How was it that no less than 300 had made successful appeals that brought their release? Most grievously, to this day the full story of the murders of Falcone and Borsellino twenty years ago, while clearly a direct result of their anti-Mafia prosecutions, remains an enigma shrouded in mystery.  

    And yet a revival of debate over the events of two decades ago began three years with a formal inquiry into whether or not a secret deal had been struck in 1992 between state authorities and Mafia bosses. As a result of the new investigation, headed by magistrate Antonio Ingroia, the events of two decades past remain today's daily fare, marked by bitter exchanges between the press and respectable politicians holding radically opposed points of view.

    Sparking this alleged negotiation was violence. In 1992 the Mafia not in prison went on a killing binge in Palermo that reportedly terrified the entire political class, beginning in Sicily but not only in Sicily. Salvo Lima, a powerful politician in Sicily, personal friend and associate of his fellow Christian Democrat in Rome, Giulio Andreotti, was murdered on January 31, 1992. Then Judge Falcone was murdered on May 23 along with his bodyguards. Next victim in this year of horror was prosecutor Borsellino on July 19, 1992. Bombs recognized as planted by the Mafia were placed in an ancient church near tourist destinations in central Rome and near the Uffizi Museum in Florence. The point - again, still hotly debated - was to frighten the politicians into blocking future Mafia prosecutions and to soften the conditions of detention of the Mafia bosses still in prison.

    A total of twelve politicians and Mafia bosses  now risk being tried for conducting a very illegal negotiation between Mafia and state. The most prominent politician involved is Nicola Mancino, a leading Christian Democrat who took office as Interior Minister on July 1, 1992, five weeks after Falcone was murdered and just 19 days before Borsellino was similarly killed by a bomb. In the new investigation Mancino is formally accused of having given false testimony during the trial of a former senior police officer with the special operations unit (ROS) of the Carabinieri accused of conducting the negotiations together with the late Vito Ciancimino, a former Palermo mayor convicted for Mafia association and for related money laundering.

    Mancino denies the charges. The problem is that this summer court-ordered phone taps reveal Mancino repeatedly telephoning the chief legal counsellor at the Quirinal Palace, Loris D'Ambrosio, 65, and asking for a helping hand. Whether to brush off the appeals or whether actual help from the Quirinal was possible, D'Ambrosio seemed to acquiesce.

    On July 26, shortly after the phone taps were legally published (the indictment is in the public domain), D'Ambrosio suffered a heart attack and died.  

    Current headlines and photographs show President Giorgio Napolitano touchingly placing his hand upon the coffin of his friend and trusted legal counsellor.

    In an interview published July 29 in La Repubblica, Ingroia was asked about claims from some quarters that the negotiations between state and Mafia never took place. Untrue, he said: "Sentences [from previous trials] already definitively establish that they did, and we began from those. Today the country has a unique opportunity - I would not like for it to be lost."

    And if there was a raison d'etat behind the secret negotiations? If so, he replied, the magistrates of Palermo "could only take a step backward."

    At this point, inquiring magistrate Ingroia, braving harsh criticism following the death of D'Ambrosio, and even more, the continuing serious risk to his life from the Mafia, has just accepted a transfer to Guatemala. But even as he takes a step  elsewhere, the enigma surrounding the murders of Falcone and Borsellino, of their bodyguards, of Salvo Lima, and of the illicit negotiations they spawned, remains.

  • Facts & Stories

    Summer spreads out the spread

    ROME - The seriously overweight gentleman in a bathing suit was sprawled in a chair at the edge of the beach and dozing this morning on Lake Bracciano, when a friend approached and asked, "Are you sleeping life away?" The reply, in Roman dialect: "Whadda ya want? I've got the spread."

    So does a lot of Italy. The upward surge of the spread to today's 506.48 for 10-year bonds (but 519 at the opening of the markets) has reignited interest in holding elections this November, six months ahead of schedule. The emergency premier Mario Monti reportedly told President Giorgio Napolitano Wednesday that, "My government has done what it could." (A cautionary note: in citing this in quotes the Italian press used the ambiguous words "avrebbe detto," or "seems to have said.")

    Whether or not these were Monti's precise words, they definitely express a darkening mood. Although the Monti government enjoys international prestige, including from the U.S., at home Monti has lost some of the popularity his government had when it came to power last November. The same happens to politicians everywhere when reality challenges the early political glow, but here the sense of disillusionment is aggravated, both by falling unemployment (at 10.1%, down 2% over just a year ago) and by the realization that the fiscal pressure on Italians already stands at 53% or  more.

    "The global scenario has turned worse," according to a new report by Confindustria, the national association of manufacturers, which predicts that the GDP will continue to decline. "As the second trimester comes to an end the negative indexes annul the probability of a relaunch within the year." Furthermore, the report continued, Europe itself is in a downward spiral due to the collapse of the real estate bubble, a reduction in bank liquidity and a drop in consumer spending by families.

    A drop in income has hit local administrations in particular, whose incomes shrank by 7% in 2011 over 2010, putting cities like Rome and Naples at risk of being unable to pay full wages to their employees in August. Regions, provinces and townships have suffered, altogether, a drop in income of circa 20% in the two years 2010-2011. In protest, earlier this week mayors from townships throughout Italy came into Rome to demonstrate.

    "The central government administrations have been hit less than the local by the efforts to contain spending," Luigi Giampaolino, president of the Corte dei Conti, told the Budget Commission of the Chamber of Deputies yesterday. According to this public spending oversight body, local administrations are, more than the national government, "very exposed to restrictions and limitations" upon actions to defend their incomes through investments. As a result, the national budget decreased by only 6% because income from state investments rose by 12.3%, helping to offset the 18% drop from other income sources over the same period.

    Not surprisingly, former Premier Silvio Berlusconi's entourage is not losing the opportunity to point out that, if the spread is up again, this proves that Berlusconi took the blame unfairly for its earlier high tide level. Moreover, in an interview with the German tabloid Bild, Berlusconi boasted that, "If Italy's public accounts are now back under control, it is largely thanks to my government." Berlusconi also took credit for acting in the national interest in leaving the premiership. "I wanted to enable constitutional and other reforms to be approved."

    And indeed the remnants of his Partito della Liberta' (PdL) are themselves surging into the piazza in Milan Wednesday afternoon, for an event entitled "Sognando Forza Italia," or "Dreaming of Forza Italia." Berlusconi's pre-PdL political organization is just being reawakened as a potential successor to the flagging PdL, and with good reason; the PdL, which peaked at 38% in public opinion polls just a few years ago, has now sunk to about 20%.

    If this is the beginning of the end, does this mean the end of Monti himself? Not necessarily, for it is just possible that the politicians--depending upon who is in charge after November--put him back in place but with greater political clout. At the moment the stalemate over a new election law to replace the discredited law in vigor now may be breaking, even though the comic and popular political bad boy Beppe Grillo maintains that the only reason some want it changed is so that his action party, which is running third in the polls behind the Partito Democratico of Pier Luigi Bersani (over and Berlusconi's PdL, will not take benefit from the present law, nicknamed the Porcellum (pigsty law).

    And meanwhile, as Rome burns, the summer holiday ritual  of a long vacation is chilling out, if slowly. In interviews with 6,000 Italians the number of those staying at home of necessity rose by 2%, from 11% to 13%. They are burning the home fires, at least; only one of six is traveling abroad.

  • Op-Eds

    A New Family Style for Italy

    ROME - At a meeting of its directorate on July 14, the supposedly left-leaning Partito Democratico (PD) was asked to vote a motion to support gay civil unions. The motion was put forward by Ivan Scalfarotto, his party's vice president, and Paola Concia, the first openly gay member of Parliament. But when party leader Pier Luigi Bersani backed away from putting the issue to a vote, a nasty shouting match broke out.

    If anything, Bersani's hesitation triggered a broader debate elsewhere. At a meeting this week with the national leadership of his Union of Christian Democrats (UDC), Catholic centrist Pier Ferdinando Casini declared that, "Marriage between gays is a profoundly uncivil idea - a violence of nature, against nature." Casini, however, whose critics did not overlook that he is on his own second marriage, acknowledged that de facto unwed couples, though not gays, should have some form of "judicial guarantee."

    This week the Milan city council is slated to vote on the issue, and a demonstration in favor of civil unions took place there. Mayor Giuliano Pisapia went on record reiterating his promise of last March to institute an official registry for civil unions which would include recognition of gay couples. If Pisapia's proposal passes, couples in civil unions, including gay couples, would obtain access to all city services available to families.

    The Catholic members of the Partito Democratico in the Milan city council declined to back Pisapia's project. But as the argument continued unabated, PD leader Bersani went on record, saying firmly, "We will allow gay unions. Others tend to their own positions." Some 86 Italian townships already have a registry for de facto heterosexual couples, while  two towns have a registry that permits gay couples a form of legality.

    Arguing against the revised family law was Mattia Ferraro, vice president of the Union of Catholic Jurists in Milan, who warned that: "One cannot ignore the risk that the equivalency being sought between civil unions and families founded upon matrimony leads toward the legitimizing of polygamy." If passed, the polygamous immigrant in Milan could demand that his union with several wives be recognized, Ferraro pointed out. Pro-gay rights activists objected to their desire for legal recognition being compared with polygamy, even though the question of how to deal with polygamous immigrant families is in fact a knotty problem in some Northern Italian cities.

    Statistics demonstrating the changing Italian family explain some of the support for the rights of civil unions. Even without immigration, and despite Church pressure, the Italian family has already been dramatically transformed. Today one out of every four children is born to parents who are not married; in 1912 only one out of 20 was born out of wedlock. Moreover, according to the official statistics-gathering agency ISTAT, today's Italian family lasts on the average only 15 years before the union is dissolved. If not yet approaching U.S. statistics, which show one out of two marriages ending in divorce, in Italy in 2010, out of 1,000 marriages over 300 ended in legal separation or divorce--twice that of 1995. The number of separations is rising by 2.6% a year and divorces, 0.5%.

    The average age of separation is 45 for men and 42 for women. But curiously the over-sixties are beginning to live what the statisticians call a second life. In 2010 over the year 2000 the number of men over sixty who divorce has doubled, with 10% of the men separating or divorcing by comparison with 6.4% of the women.

    And even as the traditional Italian marriage wanes, gay marriage is beginning to be accepted,
    and Parliamentarian Paola Concia, 48, legally wed Ricarda Trautmann, a criminologist, though not in Italy. The civil ceremony took place in Frankfurt, Germany, just one year ago, as the magazine Vanity Fair reported >>>

    Next on the agenda, slowly but finally at least beginning to be discussed: gay couples adopting children.

  • Op-Eds

    Italy in a Bad Mood(y's)

    ROME -  Beginning with the spread, in recent weeks fears that the gap between the earnings deriving from long-term German and Italian bonds will surge further upward has fostered a widespread sense, if not of panic, of angst here.

    The customarily cautious Premier Mario Monti, speaking in Brussels July 10, revealed his concern by his attempt to analyze why the spread continues to oscillate despite the European leaders' recent stability agreements. In an interview July 8 with Skytg24 TV, speaking from Aix-en-Provence, Monti was more explicit.

    There are unknown factors in the markets and in the mechanisms that support the Eurozone, "and perhaps, in the case of Italy, a degree of uncertainty as to what will happen in managing the economy or, put another way, in the Italian political situation after the elections of 2013," Monti acknowledged.

    Monti again revealed his concern over the spread after Giorgio Squinzi, the neo-president of the Italian manufacturers' association Confindustria, declared bluntly that he would flunk the Monti government. To this Monti retorted icily, with barely concealed anger, "Statements of this type made by institutional figures and individuals who are supposedly responsible have very negative effects on the markets and on the assessments made by international organizations."

    On the other hand, Italy's credit rating was downgraded this week from A3 to Baa2 by Moody's, just when Monti was landing in Idaho to attend the high-tech conference in Idaho with Bill Gates and other U.S. financial potentates. At that point Italian bank shares, at least, dropped by under 2%, but otherwise the Italian stock market remained firm, allowing the reaction across the board to turn anti-Moody's. The drop, which positioned Italy just two levels above junk status, was taken by many here as an insult, and commentators were angrily saying, "Italy is not junk!"

    "The [Moody's] downgrading is unjustified and misleading," protested Minister for Industry Corrado Passera at a press conference Friday. For its part Moody's declared that "Italy's near-term economic outlook has deteriorated," with weaker growth and higher unemployment than in recent months - and warned moreover that further downgrading could be in store.

    And so to the Porcellum, as the present incredibly complicated and confusing election law is universally known. It was invented by the Northern League's Roberto Calderoli under the Berlusconi regime, and the named sarcastically coined because its predecessor had been called the Mattarellum, after the old Christian Democrat politician who drafted it in 1993. Under the terms of this "pigsty" law, the political powers-that-be choose the candidates, a procedure that in effect limits candidacies to only those approved by the inner circle. At present Berlusconi - who has just at age 76 let it be known that he will run for office again, after rethinking and reflecting on the situation - approves of the Porcellum, which gives the winning parties enough bonus members of Parliament that the opposition is squeezed. (To hear a five-minute explanation in Italian of the Porcellum and proposed alternative reform bills, check out La Repubblica's Massimo Giannino >>>

    The problem has suddenly become serious as the political world has taken on board that national general elections are only nine months away, set for April. Because they will be followed by election of a president to succeed Giorgio Napolitano, the Parliament and Senate elected at that time will also choose Napolitano's successor. Reforms are being proposed, but within the major parties themselves, beginning with Berlusconi's Forza Italia (slated to change its name) and the Partito Democratico of Pier Luigi Bersani, there is disagreement; those opposing change say that a reform would take too long and, besides, some among their numbers may hope that they will be the lucky ones to pick up the bonus MPs and senators.

    Finally, details of the spending review continue to emerge. Among the most touching is a complaint by the head of the reputable Italian statistics-gathering agency ISTAT that the cuts mean that, while he will go on paying wages and office space, the agency will be unable to carry out its mission because there will simply be no more money for programs. Another instance of spending cuts being imposed by the Monti government is to drop minor judicial offices run by justices of the peace because most churn out little work. On the other hand there are also those which perform efficiently and handle thousands of cases, and so there is some resentment.

    How are all these linked? At the Idaho high-tech conference Bill Gates, among others, expressed confidence in Monti but at the same time concern at who will be in charge after April. At the moment the Monti government is still popular with a strong majority of Italians and enjoys the support of the international community, such as the IMF. At the same time the traditional political parties (to the extent that they are traditional) are running scared - scared of Beppe Grillo, scared of a predicted avalanche of abstentions, scared of a generalized antagonism to all political parties. And meantime the long hot summer is just beginning, a prelude to a scorching autumn.   

  • Op-Eds

    Vatican Passes Money Laundering Test (Sort of)


    ROME -  Although the Vatican has long maintained that the IOR is not a bank in the usual sense, it nevertheless walks like a bank and talks like a bank, with some $7.6 billion in deposits. The IOR is anxious to win high marks from MONEYVAL, whose assessment reports are shared with and accepted by the World Bank and the IMF, among others.


    The Council of Europe's committee evaluation has loomed all the more important for the IOR because the Vatican bank has been plagued by recent and widely publicized scandals, triggered in part by a still unexplained $23 million cheque. Once deposited in an Italian bank, the cheque drawn on the IOR fell under Italian jurisdiction and was automatically blocked by Italian authorities on grounds that it could represent possible money laundering.


    "Instead of being on some Caribbean island, this [bank] is right in the middle of Europe, in the heart of Rome. Its business model depends on keeping things as shrouded as possible from all financial authorities. Capital gains are untaxed, financial statements are not disclosed and anonymity is guaranteed. The bank's exotic status of belonging to a religious monarchy in a sovereign state the size of a city park has shielded it from investigations and unpleasant external monitoring," sentenced Der Spiegel in a long analysis July 2.


    Other serious observers agree. Last month the dissident Catholic theologian Hans Kung wrote of his feats that the IOR "will remain today as yesterday. on the black list of the banks who recycle dirty money.... It is not only the Pope's butler, but the systemic defects which make his betrayal possible. There is no transparency, from the naming of bishops to financial policy...and a habit of hiding the facts."


    After the $23 million cheque was found, Italian prosecutors summoned IOR bank president Ettore Gotti Tedeschi for questioning about possible IOR violation of Italian anti-money laundering laws. Italian police territory also ransacked his office outside Vatican territory and reportedly uncovered names of Italians (not yet leaked, incidentally) holding accounts at the IOR. Gotti Tedeschi was apparently cooperative with the Italian prosecutors, but at this point, rightly or wrongly, he was sacked by a Vatican bank oversight committee.


    Clearance by MONEYVAL could therefore go a long way toward restoring IOR prestige, and this week's session, July 2-6, was eagerly (and nervously) awaited in the Vatican. A full evaluation is yet to come, however. According to the Council of Europe's press release, "All states evaluated by MONEYVAL have the opportunity to check the accuracy of the amended version of the report after it has been adopted, and to provide any comments for publication." These Vatican "comments" are are not due until August, meaning that the full results will not by available until early autumn, when the committee's evaluation will appear on its website together with comments, if there are any, by its observer state representatives.


    In the meantime, the straws in the wind are blowing the Vatican's way. Already, the IOR has indicated that it will not reveal any account information prior to April 2011, and this has been accepted. Prior to this week's session MONEYVAL inspectors sent its member states, including Italy, a list of 16 issues for evaluation. Italy reportedly passed on eight, meaning that half the requisites were not met. At Tuesday's session  the number rose to a more acceptable nine out of 16. But at that point the experienced head of the Bank of Italy's Financial Intelligence Unit, Giovanni Castaldi, unexpectedly ordered the withdrawal of his representatives from the session. Curiously, the Italian government delegation was notably thin, lacking those most able to testify about the Italian justice inquiry that is currently underway. "The Italian government has put a gag on its anti-money laundering delegation in Europe in order to help the Vatican," according to reporter Marco Lillo, writing in Il Fatto Quotidiano.


         





  • Op-Eds

    Keeping Italy's Enviable National Health System Healthy

    ROME - I met pretty, ever smiling Flavia in a ward at a big teaching hospital in Rome, where we were both recovering from surgery not long ago. In her early thirties, she is married with two children in elementary school. The family live in Calabria, where her husband earns under $1,000 monthly. She suffers from Crohn's disease, and her entire intestine had to be surgically removed. The Roman team is well known, and so she was sent here for the operation.

    Attending her during almost two weeks of care were her husband and mother, who stayed with nuns in a hospice while her father took care of the children back home. Despite a situation which can only be described as difficult in every way, Flavia enjoyed the best of care and has a bright future.

    Obviously there are darker patches, but, whenever I have the chance, I boast to my fellow Americans about the advantages of Italy's nationalized universal health care system. There is care for expectant mothers and for infants, down to and including inoculations against polio. There is care for the elderly. And care for those in real need, like Flavia - care that does not require their selling their home to pay the hospital bills.  This is thanks to a law that created a national public health service in 1978 with the support of  85% of Parliament. The result in the past three decades as been quite an achievement, with the World Health Organization citing Italy as second in the world for "capacity and quality of care." As Livia Turco, Health Minister during the Romano Prodi government, has remarked, "Perhaps we Italians take it for granted, but in reality very few countries in the world guarantee health care of this type for all citizens, with no discrimination whatsoever."

    At the same time, we know that many of the Italian health service doctors suffer from patient overload, and simply lack the time to reflect at due length upon an individual's aches and pains. Instead of thoughtful care, the numerous elderly men and women who crowd into the waiting rooms tend to leave with a handful of prescriptions - more, I suspect, than a more careful examination of their conditions would justify. In this way the doctors trying not to waste their time waste prescription money.

    This national health service is one of the areas under attack by the bean-counters of the present emergency government headed by Premier Mario Monti. Under relentless pressure fto cut costs, Health Minister Renato Balduzzi, 57, who is a professor of constitutional law at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan, is expected to slash health service expenses, down to and including janitorial and laundry services, by around $1.3 billion before the year is out. About one-third of the cuts will come from a reduction in expenditures for pharmaceutical products, from medicines to gauzes and syringes. The government has prepared a suggested list of prices for acquiring medical products, in effect suggesting that in the past some prices were inflated.

    "I'll go with saving on syringes," Pier Luigi Bersani, 62, head of the left-leaning Partito Democratico, commented gruffly Tuesday, "but won't tolerate jobs being cut." Was this flat statement realism or rhetoric? For an example of cost cutting, one way in which US hospitals - and who more spendthrift than they? - are reducing expenditures is by having centralized expert reading of X-rays sent from small local hospitals (those same local hospitals Italy is trying to cut out instead of improve). After the patient has an X-ray in the local hospital, the results are sent via the Internet for reading by experts. Some jobs are cut, but patients benefit from top quality analysis. The same occurs in Italy, but less routinely.

    The point is that the national health service is a national treasure and should be preserved, even at the price of reducing employees.

    Cutting the costs of hospital care is only one of the goals of Premier Monti's almost complete spending review, of course. On other fronts the government intends to reduce the number of public employees by offering retirement two years ahead of schedule, with 80% of the salary over a two-year period. In practice, this may mean that pension payments will amount to about half the pay received at retirement age. Some 280 local courts and other judiciary offices risk closure. Among the cuts expected in the Defense Ministry, rents being paid for office space will be cancelled and a 5-10% reduction in personnel is expected, but weapons acquisitions will remain untouched. Elsewhere in the bureaucracy a reduction of some 10,000 to 100,000 employees is under consideration.

    However harsh all this seems, Monti, still proud of his recent showing at a meeting in Brussels at the EU summit in Germany, continues to ride high in the saddle and was speaking of his government seeing the crisis through until time to vote next Spring. Before the Brussels summit La Repubblica commented that vultures were circling over Palazzo Chigi (the Premier's office). After Brussels all that seemed changed, and on Wednesday afternoon Monti was meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel in Rome. As the German magazine Der Spiegel commented this week, "For now Monti appears to be safe, and Berlusconi will have to go back to his sulking... Monti [is] a serious actor on the European stage, who must be taken seriously. For the foreseeable future, the European Union will no longer be dominated by Germany ad France."   

  • Facts & Stories

    "Grillismo" and the Powerful Forces

    ROME - The pollsters are now putting Beppe Grillo's share of the Italian electorate at 16%, putting his popularity among voters almost on a par with that of Silvio Berlusconi's Partito della Libertà (PdL), which continues to be sinking like a stone. The sometime comic cum fulltime politician Grillo is so successful these days that, when Berlusconi launched his idea that Italy should dump the Euro and start printing its own money again, the comments were more on the side of hilarity than outrage. Here's just one: "So now we have the 75-year-old Berlusconi trying to out-Grillo the 70-year-old Beppe Grillo, which - if anyone had doubts - is proof that Italy is truly a gerontocracy."

    This would be part of the picturesque, picaresque quality of Italian political life save that Premier Mario Monti - whose invocations of financial rigor have Grillo calling the ever-sober Premier "Rigor Montis" - announced solemnly Wednesday night in a video conference with a banking group in Palermo that he has lost the support of the national association of manufacturers, Confindustria now under the leadership of Giorgio Squinzi, and of the powerful, business-oriented Milan-based newspaper Corriere della Sera.

    Monti's carefully chosen words had the political pundits leaping out of their easy chairs, for they suggest that the Premier is throwing in the towel and that, hence, his government may not last beyond this summer, precipitating elections at least six months ahead of schedule. In the largest sense, should this shift precipitate new elections before a new and more fair election law is written (and there is no talk of revising the notorious "porker law", the Porcellum), there will be more trouble ahead.

    Monti is frustrated because his government's ambitious project to revive the economy, drafted by Development Minister Corrado Passera, was trounced by Monti's own Treasury Minister on grounds of lack of funds. This humiliation was followed by Monti's unexpected appointments of leading bankers to take over the top two slots of the state radio-TV network RAI. As one commentator objected, "The whole government is made up of bankers, and these two are so remote from daily life that they probably don't even own TV sets."

    On Tuesday, the Monti government will face a crucial vote of confidence over its anti-corruption draft legislation. "If we don't win the confidence vote, the government will just go home," Justice Minister Paola Severino, author of the bill, said flatly. No party seems above the accusations of corruption, not least the Northern League, whose Senator from Turin, Enrico Montani, is under investigation for "aggravated corruption" in a case that already brought about the resignation of Monti's Junior Minister for Justice Andrea Zoppini.

    Severino's aggressive statement, which can hardly have come without Monti's prior knowledge, was partly in reaction to Parliament's vote to disallow one of its rather blatantly corrupt right-wing senators to go on trial. Based upon official party statements, the senator would lose his immunity, but when the secret ballots were counted, they told another story. The vote granting the senator immunity amounted to protecting a corrupt status quo, possibly in a swap for a similar vote due next wing, when Parliament must again vote for or against lifting the immunity, in this case for a leftist politician accused of appropriating public funds for his personal use, which included setting up a massive account in Canadian banks.

    The anti-corruption bill was presented initially by Minister Severin0 in February, when she predicted it would be passed "within 15 days." As its watered-down version now reads, the maximum time limit before application of the statute of limitations is only10 years (originally it had been 15). Nor would it be a crime, as it was before the Berlusconi era, to give a falsified balance sheet. Corruption between two private individuals or their companies is punished by a mere one to three years.

    Confindustria leader Squinzi formally denies that his organization no longer supports Monti, telling a group of young businessmen on Friday that, "No, honestly I think that the moment is so difficult - we have so many worries - absolutely, I don't think that this is the time to be tendentious. We support everything that the Government can do to get the country's development back on track. Monti can count on our full support."

    So are both Premier Monti and Minister Severino merely sending up trial balloons? More likely, Monti has reason to suspect that Confindustria, with the backing of the newspaper, have already begun to consider replacing Monti's with a more highly politicized and forceful cabinet. The most likely candidate for Premier would be Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, the businessman whose personal think tank (and proto-party organization) called Italia Futura has excogitated that it could appeal to up to 15 million voters. His supporters say that Montezemolo's so-called "foundation" is a "meeting-place for bipartisan intellectuals, businessmen and managers who are disappointed with our half-caste bipartisan system; of young professionals who'd like to enter politics; of citizens with a desire to make policies.... It is present in every region, and is now selecting is leadership class and considering potential candidates for a civic list. With 50,000 members it is elaborating its political platform, whose key is the reform of the state and the launching of a costituente [charter for a Third Republic]. The end of the Second Republic opens brand new space for new entries in the political arena."

    If Montezemolo pulls it off, his most likely first ally will be former Premier Silvio Berlusconi himself. Behind the scenes Berlusconi is actively seeking a new role, after more or less abandoning his failing PdL in the hands of an increasingly sidelined Angelino Alfano. And behind Tuesday's vote looms the shadow of Berlusconi, who once admitted to the late journalist Indro Montanelli that, "If I don't go into politics, I'll be sent to jail for debts."

  • Events: Reports

    Emilia-Romagna: The Nightmare Continues

    ROME - Bless her, Mamma RAI does her best (this maternal image is how the Italians call their state-owned radio-TV network, akin to the Brits calling the BBC "Auntie"). Here she was at 1:30 pm today, burbling on about the wonders of Emilia-Romagna's charming little towns redolent with history and art, terrific food, fabulous spas with natural hot springs, welcoming hotels. All true, but trouble is, for the previous half hour Mamma RAI's children had been listening to the heart-rending accounts of the continuing earth tremors in exactly that region, where 10% of this summer's tourist bookings have already been cancelled. One can sympathize with the hotel people, but when they blame the foreign media for the cancellations, they are wrong - it is the event, not the reporting of it, that is terrifying, and not only to potential tourists.

    The human cost of the relentless earthquakes is almost beyond tally. There is the death toll (7 a week ago after the first tremor, 17 this week after the second tremendous quake), but also the life toll - the terror that seeps into a soul awakened at 11 pm, as were those in the towns near Modena last night, by a new cycle of tremors. On Thursday alone 101 tremors rocked the provinces of Modena, Ferrara and Mantua in the course of 24 hours. Today, Friday, at 9 am a drummer with the Modena City Ramblers, who has been sleeping in his car with his family for the past 15 days, was driving his children to school at Cavezzo when his automobile bucked up like a bronco, with its wheels whirring futilely, as a new after-shock struck. In front he watched a factory building crumple down "as if it were made of chocolate."

    And it is not only terror seeping: Emilia-Romagna lies atop an ancient sea bed, so the subsoil is of sand, or was, and in some kitchens that muddy sand has bubbled up from the sub-soil to cover the kitchen floor tiles with a foot of filth.

    "You have to arrive at dawn to understand how bad things are," said one reporter. "That's when you realize how many people are sleeping in their cars." How many? The official count of the homeless stands at 15,000, but some 200,000 are in fact sleeping in their cars and in their summer camp-out tents by their houses "so that we can keep an eye on the house." Not all the victims have been counted. As one woman wept to a RAI reporter, "Our town is so small, not a single person has arrived to see about us, but we've been sleeping outdoors now for 12 nights - I can't go on!"

    The shaking of the earth is ghastly, but man adds his gruesome cruelty: cars with loudspeakers have been driving down main streets to advise residents that they must leave their homes for safety's sake - only to find that these self-styled life-savers are nothing but looters. At Mirandola three looters were arrested so far. For these warped human beings wearing fake (or stolen) uniforms, the quake is an occasion for profit. Thus ever, and when I interviewed Irpinia earthquake rescue volunteers in 1981 they told me that, on arriving at night, they found the bodies of two looters strung up from trees.

    It is not to diminish the physical or psychological toll upon the inhabitants to speak of the costs to the economy of these almost two weeks of earthquakes. Emilia-Romagna alone accounts for 1% of Italy's GNP, and with over E 134 million annually, is Italy's fourth most productive region, behind only Lombardy, Lazio and the Veneto. These flatlands are home to some 700 cattle farms, whose milk goes into the world-famed and super-healthy Parmigiano and Padana cheeses for eating and grating. In the case of the Parmigiano producers some 633,700 huge wheels of cheese in various stages of aging were tumbled onto the floors as scaffolding collapsed. So far the losses are calculated at E 150 million ($186 million), surely an underestimate, even as shark-like buyers are snapping up Parmigiano Reggiano at E 2 ($2.5) per kilo, or under one-tenth of its retail cost. The future looks grim, for many producers used their current production as a kind of bank guarantee for loans; and in the meantime one out of every five cows is without forage and hence is going hungry, just as are the townspeople in the zones worst struck.

    Not only agriculture is compromised. The word going around is that it's back to work as usual, and even department stores have set up stalls outdoors. But because jerry-built factories collapsed just this week on top of workers, killing ten, workers in those big industrial establishments which were not destroyed are living and working with fear. "I used to concentrate on the conveyor belt. Now I'm looking up every other minute to see if the roof is going to fall on me," said one worker. It made a footnote that one cynical industrialist was caught packing up the machine tools for his two carpentry shops to "delocalize" to Romania, until a trade union delegation from Bologna physically blocked his trucks.

    Anyone able to make a contribution of E 2 ($2.50) can send an SMS to +39 45500, the special number for the Italian Civil Protection agency. And the Ferrari motor company at Maranello is holding a world-wide auction next week on its site ferraristore.com to raise funds for families of victims. The auction winner will own a 599xx Evo sports car valued at E 1.3 million ($1.6 million).

Pages