Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Italy's Berlusconi acquitted in corruption trial linked to 'bunga bunga' parties

FILE - In this Sunday, Oct. 3, 2021 file photo, Silvio Berlusconi leaves a polling station in Milan, Italy.
FILE - In this Sunday, Oct. 3, 2021 file photo, Silvio Berlusconi leaves a polling station in Milan, Italy. Copyright  Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via AP
Copyright Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via AP
By AP with Euronews
Published on Updated
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button

Lawyers for Silvio Berlusconi, the former Italian premier, say he has been acquitted by a court in Siena of corruption on Thursday.

ADVERTISEMENT

Former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi was acquitted of judicial corruption charges on Thursday evening in a trial in Tuscany, his lawyers said.

Various Italian media reported the judge said there was no evidence for conviction as he read the verdict.

Prosecutors had alleged that Berlusconi had sought to corrupt with payoffs witnesses who would be testifying about what happened at the so-called “bunga bunga” parties with young female guests at his villa in Arcore, on the outskirts of Milan.

La Repubblica daily quoted one of the defence lawyers, Federico Cecconi, as telling journalists he had informed Berlusconi about the acquittal, and that the 85-year-old billionaire media mogul was “obviously relieved and satisfied.”

Also acquitted of judicial corruption was a pianist who worked at Arcore during the evenings, which the defence had described as elegant dinner parties, Italian news reports said.

Prosecutors had sought conviction and a prison sentence of four years for each of the two defendants.

The trial was an off-shoot of a criminal case that ended up in Italy's top criminal court. That court in 2015 upheld a 2014 appeals court acquittal of Berlusconi on charges that he had paid for sex with an underage prostitute during the “bunga bunga” parties and had used his influence to cover it up.

Berlusconi jumped into politics three decades ago, forming his centre-right party, Forza Italia, going on to serve three times as premier.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more

What does former French President Nicolas Sarkozy's conviction mean for France?

Lab tests show opposition leader Alexei Navalny poisoned in Russian prison, widow says

Nepal appoints first woman prime minister on interim basis as calm restored following Gen-Z protests