D’Alema: “The Cav.’s funeral is not a matter of controversy”

D'Alema: "The Cav.'s funeral is not a matter of controversy"

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National mourning is “a decision that corresponds to a feeling not of all but of an important part of Italians”, says the former prime minister. And on the conflict with the magistrates: “Berlusconi had some reason to say he was persecuted”

The funeral of the Cav. “they must not become a matter of controversy”. To say it is none other than Massimo D’Alemaformer premier and historic opponent of Berlusconi, in an interview with Courier. Unlike the protests raised by numerous exponents of the center-left area against the choice of national mourning – the chorus of Rosi Bindi and Tomaso Montanari was joined today by Emma Bonino – D’Alema stands out and, indeed, defines it “a decision that corresponds to a feeling not of all but of an important part of the Italians“.

The former prime minister thus retraces the years of political struggle with the Cav., restoring the image of “a fighter and an opponent, of course, but also a man capable of arousing admiration and even sympathy from a human point of view”. And, on the conflict with the judiciary, he states that “probably Berlusconi had some reason in considering himself persecuted. The weakening of the party system has given way to a growth in the ‘political’ power of the judiciary, which has taken upon itself the task of doing something more than prosecuting crimes”.

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