Monday, February 14, 2011

Italian Women's protest against Premier Silvio Berlusconi's sex scandal


Many Thousands of women gathered in Rome and other areas for protesting on Sunday annoyed by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's sex scandal which they say has shamed Italy. A protester 52-year-old Roberta Nicchiarelli said that Berlusconi has presented a shameful country scenario and women are insulted. 

The protest has been made in at least 200 towns in Italy and some far away cities show hiking annoyed amid women over the prostitution scandal that has overwhelmed the prime minister, who has long added conservative women among his significant voters.

A former Berlusconi voter Pina said that "I am very disappointed because I had voted for him in the past, I hope things will change. The Prosecutors filed a request on Wednesday explaining that Berlusconi had an illegal relation with a night club dancer when he was just under 18 year old, which is banned in Italy, therefore a trial must be started against Mr. Berlusconi.


The 74-year old prime minister has rejected the allegations as "loathing and shameful."
A secret wiretaps from the investigation have been marked over newspapers for weeks with orientations to bags  of cash and awards that would be new comer charming actresses received after participating parties at Berlusconi's villa. "It's a scandal. 

"Padua" a protester from northern Italy said “I don’t consider in his ethics, his manners and the approach he teats women. Italy doesn't have a future if these prevailing manners are set aside. The photos and videos of rising directory of young women from the outer edge of show business claims to be linked to Berlusconi have been televised over Italian television and media web sites.


The scandal in largely Catholic Italy has restored opposition calls for Berlusconi to quit at a time when he is sticking to power after a crack in the ruling PDL party last year.

But he has endured outrages in the past and some of his most stem followers presented pro-Berlusconi rallies earlier in the week, while making Sunday's protests a solely and politically provoked tactic. The women's protests go behind many anti-Berlusconi rallies this week. Due to higher political stress President Giorgio Napolitano has warned Berlusconi at a meeting on Friday that Italy menaced facing new elections as a result.

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