Home About Us Feedback Download
     Advanced Search  
March 11, 2010
 India
National
Politics
Business
Sports
Sci-Tech
Entertainment
Travel
Health
Religion
Art - Culture
Diaspora
Education
 International
Pakistan
Rest of South Asia
Asia
Americas
Europe
Australasia
Gulf-Middle East
Africa
World
 Business:
 ASIA | US | EUROPE
 updated 1330 IST
 NIKKEI -2 11488 
 HANG SENG +51 13846 
 NEC -9 4164 
  Home » Europe   E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Italian PM rules out early elections
11/19/2009 1:01:00 PM

Rome, Nov 19 (IANS/AKI) Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has ruled out a general election and said his government was 'solid'.

In a statement which followed days of mounting tension within Berlusconi's conservative ruling coalition, he said the parliament would serve its full term.

'I am astonished at the proliferating reports claiming there will be a snap election. I have never entertained any such idea,' he said.

'The mandate we received from voters was to govern for five years. And we intend to complete this mandate with determination - for the good of the country.

'The ruling coalition is solid, irrespective of any internal dialectic which can only strengthen its ability to produce ideas,' Berlusconi said.

The premier's remarks came after Italy's Senate speaker Renato Schifani stated Tuesday: 'The parliament must enact the programme of the government. If this fails to happen, elections must be called.'

Tensions have emerged in the ruling coalition over a controversial bill introduced this month in the parliament that would shorten the length of trials and let at least 100,000 suspects off the hook over the next two years.

Two trials in which Berlusconi is accused of tax fraud and bribery are among those that would be 'timed out' by the bill. Berlusconi and his supporters claim the bill will reform Italy's notoriously show and cumbersome system of justice but critics say its real aim is to solve his legal problems.

Italy's lower house of parliament speaker Gianfranco Fini last week gave crucial but reluctant backing to the bill.

But Wednesday he said: 'We cannot adopt the principle that in an alternating parliamentary democracy, each ruling majority changes the rules to please itself.'

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
Top News
  Good looks not always important: ...
  Putin arrives, nuclear, Gorshkov ...
  This Australian team will create ...
  Police find photos of godman 'mar ...
  Couple commits suicide in Agra
  Germany to play Australia in Worl ...
  110 firms in IIM-Ahmedabad placem ...
  Two early goals killed us, says E ...
  Chhattisgarh assembly panel to pr ...
  Call centre employee killed by je ...
 
World News
  Good wins for Juventus, Hamburg a ...
  12 strong quakes shake Chile on i ...
  Obama donates Nobel Peace Prize m ...
  US raises concerns about human ri ...
  Two Israeli soldiers indicted for ...
  Ban calls for more protection for ...
  Abu Dhabi launches plan to boost ...
  Scorsese named top director
  Brazil's economy contracts after ...
  Renee Zellweger gifts $100 coffee ...
 
Advertisement 


South Asian Videos
Bollywood On Demand
India On Demand
Tollywood On Demand
Kollywood On Demand
Hollywood Videos
India User Videos
Realtors India
Indian Friends
Indian Short Films
Post Classifieds
Bollywood Pictures
Hindi Lyrics
Hindi Songs
Bollywood Photos
Indian Videos
India Greetings
Play Games Online
Indian Recipes
National|Politics|Business|Sports|Sci-Tech|Entertainment|Travel|Health|Religion|Art - Culture|Diaspora|Education|
Pakistan|Rest of South Asia|Asia|Americas|Europe|Australasia|Gulf-Middle East|Africa|World|
Help | Site Map | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Publishers

©2009 southasianews.com, All Rights Reserved