home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
030893
/
03089934.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
6KB
|
119 lines
<text id=93TT1121>
<title>
Mar. 08, 1993: Sick Of It All
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ITALY, Page 48
Sick Of It All
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Probing into an apparently bottomless political cesspool leaves
the whole country feeling dirty
</p>
<p>JOHN MOODY/ROME
</p>
<p> Rome finally fell to the barbarians because of its decadence.
Modern Italians are learning that history can repeat itself.
Their proud and prosperous country is in decline and free fall
because of some nasty vices familiar to the Caesars: greed,
complacency and a betrayal of trust by those on whom it was
conferred. Last year the ignominious ouster of the lira from
Europe's exchange-rate mechanism told Italians that their economy
was not as resilient as they once thought. Then they were forced
to confront the power of the Mafia. And for 18 agonizing months
they have been discovering that the crooks are not confined
to the Cosa Nostra but reach right into the country's political
establishment.
</p>
<p> The corruption investigation into kickbacks to political parties
in return for public-works contracts has uncovered what now
seems to be the largest public-corruption scandal in modern
European history. Operation Clean Hands, run by five judicial
prosecutors from a warren of fusty offices in Milan, has swept
through Italy's corridors of power like a sirocco. Once confined
to Milan, Clean Hands has now reached 21 cities. More than 800
people have been arrested and an additional 1,000 are thought
to be under investigation.
</p>
<p> The probe has claimed a number of prominent victims. Last week
Giorgio La Malfa, leader of the small but influential Republican
Party that bills itself as "the party of honest people," resigned
after being notified he was under criminal investigation. Earlier,
the chief financial officer for Fiat, Italy's largest private
employer, was arrested along with another top executive. Both
maintain their innocence. Ex-Prime Minister Bettino Craxi, who
has received eight notifications that he is suspected of corruption
offenses, was forced out last month as head of the Italian Socialist
Party. Rome, Milan and Naples are without mayors because of
the scandal. Three Cabinet Ministers tainted by association
have stepped down. Prime Minister Giuliano Amato was reduced
last week to arguing that just being under criminal investigation
should not oblige a public official to quit. Amato won a lukewarm
vote of confidence from Parliament last Thursday, but the scandal
may yet consume his eight-month-old government.
</p>
<p> Investigators are now zeroing in on the state monopolies for
highway construction, petrochemicals, television broadcasting,
public transit, water and electricity, where large budgets are
tempting targets for graft. Though no one has precise numbers,
one study puts the rip-off at $11 billion a year over the past
dozen years, a figure coincidentally comparable to Italy's annual
public deficit.
</p>
<p> Clean Hands began in 1991, and got a break a year ago, when
Luca Magni, owner of a cleaning company, got tired of paying
tangenti, or kickbacks, for the contract to service a public
nursing home. He led prosecutors to the facility's administrator,
Mario Chiesa, a Socialist Party activist and Craxi associate.
The police moved in, Chiesa squealed and the political house
of cards began to collapse. Admits Clean Hands chief prosecutor
Francesco Saverio Borrelli: "We had no idea when we started
how deep this would go."
</p>
<p> At first, party bigwigs tried to brazen it out. But as the evidence
of graft among the major parties multiplied, so did public outrage.
Shortly before resigning, Craxi was accosted by an angry mob
outside his party headquarters. Damning testimony from several
key figures, and the likelihood that members of Parliament will
be stripped of their immunity from criminal prosecution, sent
party higher-ups into a frenzy. Says sociologist Franco Ferrarotti
of the University of Rome: "These people always operated on
the concept that public funds belong to the person who grabs
them first. Whatever they steal is theirs. There has never been
a concept of public service."
</p>
<p> With traditional parties like the Socialists and Christian Democrats
discredited, voters are seeking alternatives. The big winner
has been the Northern League, the populist movement that has
ranted against official corruption for years. Founder Umberto
Bossi once wanted to partition Italy into two or three separate
states. Now that his party is Italy's third most powerful, he
calls instead for greater regional autonomy.
</p>
<p> Another beneficiary of the scandal is Mario Segni, 53, a renegade
Christian Democrat who wants a referendum on election reform.
Says Segni: "Italy has lived through a horrible phase of corruption.
The only good sign is that people are finally fed up." Adds
Leoluca Orlando, 45, leader of the reformist La Rete party:
"The old boys have had their chance. Now they must move aside
and let us clean up."
</p>
<p> The stain of corruption has spread so wide that Clean Hands
prosecutors cannot keep up with it. Former Christian Democrat
leader Arnaldo Forlani last week compared the endless arrests
to "the barbarization of the system that leaves nothing and
no one." In this case though, it is the barbarians inside the
gates who have to be feared.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>