- Join the France 24 community here
- Log in
Latest update: 14/12/2009
- Italy - Silvio Berlusconi
Prime Minister Berlusconi in hospital after assault at rally
Italian police have arrested a man who assaulted Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi after a rally in Milan on Sunday, bloodying the tycoon's face. Media reports say Berlusconi will spend the night in hospital.
By News Wires (text)
REUTERS - Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was rushed to hospital covered in blood with a broken nose and teeth after a man with mental problems hurled a statuette at him at a rally, officials said on Sunday.
Berlusconi was bundled into a car, with blood spattered over his face, and whisked away after the assault in a square behind the cathedral in the northern city of Milan. The media mogul had just ended a speech to thousands of flag-waving supporters.
The 73-year-old prime minister, a popular but divisive figure, said "I'm fine, I'm fine" as he arrived at the hospital.
He later told an Italian television presenter visiting him that he considered it "miraculous" not to have lost an eye in the attack, the Ansa news agency said.
His personal doctor, Alberto Zangrillo, said the premier had suffered a fractured nose, two broken teeth and cuts to his lips that required stitches.
He said Berlusconi would be kept in at least overnight for observation and would need up to 15 days to recover. The tycoon would not need surgery but could be kept in hospital for long as 48 hours, Zangrillo said.
"This is truly a bad day for Italy, and it's the duty of all the political forces to ensure that Italy does not go back to the years of violence," said Gianfranco Fini, Berlusconi's top conservative ally, one of many to denounce the incident.
A 42-year-old Italian man who has been under treatment for mental problems for 10 years was arrested for throwing a souvenir plaster statuette of the cathedral at Berlusconi from close range, police said. Sources close to the investigation named the man as Massimo Tartaglia.
The incident triggered an outpouring of solidarity for Berlusconi from allies and critics alike, just as the prime minister seeks to regain political momentum after a bruising year battling mounting legal troubles and sex scandals.
The billionaire businessman -- whose popularity has slipped -- has portrayed himself as a victim of "communist" magistrates, biased media and jealous leftists. Allies blamed the assault on an atmosphere of hatred swirling around the prime minister.
Just hours after the attack, Facebook groups had sprung up hailing or attacking Tartaglia, including one fan site with more than 32,000 fans that labelled him a man with "lots of courage".
Berlusconi's spokesman said the premier had confided his fears of a "climate of hate and aggression" against him as they travelled together to the rally.
‘Oppressive climate’
"What they've done to Berlusconi is an act of terrorism," Umberto Bossi, head of the far-right Northern League and a close Berlusconi ally, told Ansa. "An oppressive climate has been felt for some time and what's happened today is a worrying sign."
A number of ministers and supporters gathered at the Milan hospital where Berlusconi was spending the night.
The attack came after a speech that had been billed as politically significant but revealed no big policy shift.
Berlusconi launched a familiar tirade against the left and rattled off a list of government achievements, in a characteristically feisty performance aimed at shoring up his standing and ratings.
After a summer dodging accusations of an improper relationship with a teenager and parties with escorts, Berlusconi has come under pressure lately from a widening rift with Fini and a growing list of legal headaches.
Stripped of immunity from prosecution, Berlusconi faces several trials, including one on charges of bribery and corruption and another on charges of tax fraud.
An opinion poll published on Saturday indicated his popularity had fallen four percentage points to just over 50 percent as Italians fretted that his legal entanglements could distract him from government duties.
He denies any wrongdoing and says judicial allegations against him are part of a politically-motivated campaign by biased courts and judges to bring down his government.
In 2004, an Italian bricklayer hurled a camera tripod at Berlusconi, injuring him slightly on the head.



























React to the article
(6) Reactions
i miss you
Mr Burlosconi
I missed you as primo Ministro of Italy, wish you comeback again, things are nut the seme i ITALY sence you lefy.I don`t give my vote to anyone now, PASCO
HHIHIHHIHHI AHAHAHAAHAH
HHIHIHHIHHI AHAHAHAAHAH UHUHUHUHU
Berlusconi
I don't think the guy has a mental problem and he got this SOB square in the face.Job well done!
Could've been worse
I hope they've learned a lesson. It could've been some nut with a gun. More security ? Uhhh, yeah, I think maybe...
Les excès sont la mesure de
Les excès sont la mesure de la dérive...ja suis italienne et croyez-moi cette situation bien que paradoxal et blâmable il représente le mètre de la dérive institutionnelle qui est en train de prendre guidée par un homme politique sui generis comme Berlusconi, homme qu'il groupe pouvoir exécutif et un immense pouvoir economiquè. Imaginées pour un moment que Sarkozy menace de changer la Constitution unilatéralement, attaques le pouvoir judiciaire qui devrait le juger et je sois continuellement dans ses journaux télévisés à publiciser une réalité qu'il n'existe pas dans le but de créer un système dictatoriel (parce que il est ce qu'il est en train d'arriver en Italia)voi vous pouvez puis être si étonnés du geste d'un fou...la violence soit claire il est à condamner en toutes ses formes mais cet homme il doit les prendre ses responsabilites parce qu'un pays ne peut pas être guidé ainsi inpunemente en apportant je donne à l'image international de l'Italie et de son peuple.
mental illness?
The anchor says "he is said to have a mentall illness history." There is NOTHING as mental illness, in fact. All these labels are meant to be misused (by those in power) to label oponents and opositions. Some says that Diagnostics and Statistical Manual is a fiction. There is no scientific proof for so-called disorders!