Rules and rulers

4 Oct

Gherardo Colombo was the first guest of the Italian Society of Trinity College Dublin for 2010/’11. He spoke to a packed Emmett Theatre about his career as one of Italy’s leading public prosecutor in the 1990s, when he was a member of the so-called pool di Mani Pulite or “Clean Hands Team”, a group of investigators based in Milan and who in 1992 uncovered a pervasive and widespread network of corruption involving leading politicians and the private sector. What followed appeared to be a complete renewal of the political establishment — powerful men who had been in power for years, sometimes decades, ended up in prison or fled abroad, where one in particular, several times Prime Minister Bettino Craxi, died, in exile.

What followed is history: in 1994, Silvio Berlusconi, who had managed to build a large private media network thanks to his close friendship with Mr Craxi, managed nevertheless, using said network, to convince the Italian electorate that he was a new man; someone who had built his own immense wealth — he was, already then, the owner of AC Milan — by dint of hard work; someone who had not risen from the ranks of “professional politicians” and represented therefore a new way of doing politics.

Gherardo Colombo resigned from the judiciary in 2007. As he told his audience today, he did so in protest, because he felt like a plumber who is asked to fix a fault with a secondary tap but is not allowed to fix the mains, where the problem originates. He has since devoted his time to what he considers a mission to educate people, especially young Italian students, about the importance of rules.

Dr Colombo started his talk by asking the audience whether rules are in place to help the individual to pursue happiness. A very straightforward question to which, after some hesitation, the audience answered more or less unanimously in the positive: rules allow people to be happy because they protect their freedom.

Colombo challenged this answer: have rules, he asked, always been there to allow people to be happy? Were rules meant to allow everyone to be happy before the French Revolution, for instance? Were rules meant to allow everyone to be happy when slavery was legal, or when women didn’t have the right to vote?

Gherardo Colombo’s core argument was that rules can only allow everybody’s happiness if we live in a horizontal society, in which every citizen has equal rights and obligations, but not in a pyramidal society, where people at the top have all the rights and people at the bottom all the obligations.

According to Colombo, the problem in Italy today is that its citizens see rules as a burden and individual happiness as more easily reached without that burden.

Is it because of the example set by the political establishment? Colombo disagrees. We are free, he argues, which means we are free to follow the rules of our own free volition, because it is convenient to do so, and we don’t need a positive example from above.

This is true, I think, at a very abstract level, and perhaps only for someone who already knows that rules in a democracy are there to ensure equal rights for every citizen. But if someone grew up in an environment in which this is not the consensus, where those who are law-abiding and pay their dues appear as naive because racketeers and tax dodgers are allowed to prosper, won’t they naturally consider rules to be an obstacle to happiness and a burden, and those who try to enforce the rules — the State, police — as their enemy? One member of the public, in particular, mentioned his own personal experience: being born in southern Italy, he was brought up in a society where everyone, upper to working class, lived by the very simple maxim: “F**k the State”.

Colombo seemed to disagree. As he put it, many Italians “prefer” to live by the rules of the Mafia and organized crime rather than by the rules of the State. “Prefer” is the term he used: as if murder and intimidation, and very often a State failing to offer adequate protection to its law-abiding citizens, had no role in their “choice”.

In Italy today, as Colombo himself pointed out, 50 percent of the trials involving top-level organized crime and politicians do not result in a sentence of either conviction or absolution due to increasingly restrictive statutes of limitations; numerous elected representatives, protected by parliamentary immunity, are or were suspected of dealing with mafiosi, or under investigation as mafiosi themselves; and many of the rules brought in by Italian lawmakers in recent years explicitly favour criminal behaviour or condone offenders — most notoriously the decriminalization of false accounting, which is now no longer a criminal offence but merely an administrative one.

In such a country, where citizens appear to have a high level of tolerance towards illegal behaviour — and, as pointed out by a member of the audience, society seems to be reversing from a horizontal back to a pyramidal model one step at a time — education is, according to Gherardo Colombo, the only admissible means whereby this drift can be stopped. Rules should not be broken — a reference to insurrection and the Arab Spring was thus dismissed — but changed, if unfair, through education.

Colombo’s talk suffered perhaps from an excess of didacticism — the mood that quickly settled in was very much a classroom mood, rather than a lecture-theatre one. At times, it felt as though the audience was being treated as if in secondary school, with a perhaps slightly patronising attitude on Dr Colombo’s part, who opted for a very interactive style, walking up and down the lecture theatre and addressing individual members of the audience. One of them, after answering a question in a way which obviously pleased Colombo, was treated by the latter to a rather surprisingly “give me five”. The person in question seemed absolutely delighted by this, but the impression Irish undergraduates got of this interaction was, I think, a bit puzzled.

Another amusing incident happened when Colombo was expressing the idea that in a pyramidal society people at the bottom are used as instruments by people higher up in the hierarchy. Colombo opted for the word tool and started saying that “in such a society women are tools (for men), children are tools (for adults), slaves are tools (for the free) etc.”, as the Irish undergraduates sitting in the front rows started looking at each other, desperately tried to suppress their laughters (see here for explanation) and Colombo immediately brought back to the Italians in the audience memories of their own primary school teachers by asking the undergraduates in question “May I know why you are all suddenly so amused?”

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Howth

2 Oct

I have lived in Howth for almost two years. Sometimes I think that it can only be described as a sort of postcard, using cliché images and worn-out phrases, referring to the golden sunlight of the early evening, the windswept island in the distance which bears the name of Ireland’s Eye and which I can see from my window, the colourful seafront with pubs and cafés, the harbour with fishing boats and fishmongers’ shops, the piers.

As I prepare to leave Howth, in fact to take a break from packing my innumerable numbered boxes, I went for a walk along the longer of the two piers. The sea was as still as a lake and the water looked deep blue and almost as thick as oil. Ireland’s Eye was red in the distance, the small roofless church on its coast could be seen very clearly. A strange vision, as no other house has survived — or was ever built, I don’t know. I wonder who the church had been built for.

I have taken a number of photographs of Howth since I moved here. My favourite ones are collected here.

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No room in the Áras

29 Sep

Senator David Norris got his nomination and is now officially running for the Presidency of Ireland — or, as they say here, he entered the “race for the Áras”, Áras an Uachtaráin being the Irish for “the President’s Building”. Building where, as he had said in the past and has repeated today, he would not allow his spouse, if he had one.

If Senator Norris wasn’t an openly gay candidate, I doubt he would have made such a surprising statement, one that no straight candidate would make.

The Irish Parliament passed legislation to recognize same-sex unions in July 2010. Ireland is not the first Catholic country to introduce similar legislation but, like Spain, that recognition is remarkable given the strong Catholic ethos that pervaded the country until only a few decades ago; most schools are still run by religious orders, and nurses in hospitals are still often colloquially called “sisters”.

Not only that: well-organized and visible groups like Marriage Equality have been campaigning for a full civil marriage for same-sex couples for years, and Equality Authority chairwoman Angela Kerins recently stated that “the Authority remained committed to seeing gay marriage introduced.” Politicians from different parties march along during the Gay Pride parades that take place in the largest Irish towns every year, and the Local authorities officially support the event. In short, LGBT people in Ireland may soon have spouses.

No small part in all this was played by Senator Norris himself, when in 1988 he challenged the Irish Supreme Court before the European Court of Human Rights and won, leading to the decriminalization of homosexuality in Ireland. No small feat.

It is therefore unbelievable and disheartening that he should now be state that his gay spouse, if he had one, would not live in Áras an Uachtaráin. In order to woo a wider electorate — or, as he has often put it, to be the President of all Irish people — David Norris is now openly saying that a gay spouse should be treated different from a heterosexual one. In the future, “No” campaigners in a referendum about gay marriage in Ireland will be able to quote him.

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The seal of confession

29 Aug

Cardinal Brady defended the inviolability of confessional secrecy speaking yesterday at a mass.

His intervention follows the announcement that new legislation would be passed in Ireland forcing members of the clergy who have heard confessions of child abuse or neglect to report these cases to the State’s authorities.

I do not agree with Cardinal Brady and I think that there is a problem with the approach taken now by the Irish government.

Western societies have tolerated confessional secrecy as a matter of course for centuries and never questioned it. This means that in most Western countries if a priest hears confessions of any serious crime there is no expectation that he should report it. This includes child abuse, but also abuse of other people (women, the old, the disabled, the psychologically ill, etc.), murder, kidnapping, organised crime, etc.

It is reasonable to assume that confessors have at times heard confessions of serious crimes such as these. The proposal to introduce mandatory reporting only of child abuse and neglect, as a reaction to the publication of shocking documents like the Murphy and Cloyne reports, leaves one wondering why victims of other crimes do not deserve the same protection from the legislator and the same cooperation from the Church.

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Open to all families

26 Apr

Senator Carlo Giovanardi’s remarks on the latest Ikea campaign, bizarre though they may sound to the unaccustomed reader, were so in keeping with his persona that I would have done little more than just post the link on Facebook—for the records, so to speak. He said that calling a gay couple a family was against the values upheld by the Italian Constitution. But then, he can say what he wants, can’t he?

What I didn’t expect was that one so-called Opposition MP, Giorgio Merlo, would write in his blog that he fully agrees with Mr Giovanardi: “We must speak out against Ikea’s message, at least those of us who believe in the family as defined by our Constitution.”

Incidentally, the Italian Constitution (Art. 29, official translation available from the Senate’s website) says that “The Republic recognises the rights of the family as a natural society founded on marriage” and that “Marriage is based on the moral and legal equality of the spouses within the limits laid down by law to guarantee the unity of the family.” Marriage is not mentioned anywhere else or otherwise defined. It would appear that the Constitution, like Ikea, is “open to all families”.

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Keynote

9 Apr

The Italian Prime Minister was invited to speak at one of the most prestigious Italian universities, Università La Sapienza in Rome (La Repubblica, 8 April).

Given the current situation in Italy and in the Mediterranean at large, there was a lot of things an Italian Prime Minister might have been expected to say. He might have talked about the scant careers prospects facing Italian youths, ahead of today’s demonstration, for instance.

Although, given his own circumstances, he might have chosen to resign some time ago. Especially now that most Italians have little doubt that he actually paid for sex with a minor. And that he phoned a police station to have her released after she’d been arrested for theft.

What he did instead was to joke about the sex-themed parties he’s alleged to have organised for years at his residence, by pretending that he was inviting a few attractive students to take part in them.

He also criticised a student for wearing a beard and brown shoes with a blue suit, apparently, although he hardly needed to remind the audience that looking good was important for their career, as it has been rumoured for years that one particularly attractive minister, a former model, owes her position to her looks and some non-ministerial skills.

But then, we are talking about a country where the vicepresident of the CNR (the National Research Council) is a creationist and has recently declared that the tsunami in Japan was an act of God. A country where, if you are the top university of the capital, even the prime minister and the CNR vicepresident are not safe invited speakers.

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Ruby Sunday

28 Jan

Mr Berlusconi’s party has called for a huge demonstration for February 13th—the day before Valentine’s Day, when presumably he will be busy. The goal of the demonstration, which is to take place in Milan (Piazza Duomo, where he was hit by a replica of the eponymous cathedral), is to show that the Italian people side with him against the ubiquitous “politicized judges” that so much have done in an attempt to destroy his political career.

Piazza Duomo would normally be full of all sorts of people on a Sunday; I hope the tourists won’t be too shocked when they find out that a demonstration is taking place where (hopefully not) so many Italians will turn up to show that they still support a man who, beyond any reasonable doubt, was entertaining orgies in his house while arguing that he should be excused from appearing before the various tribunals that are investigating him because he was too busy carrying out his prime-ministerial duties.

“Controversy”

14 Jan

It is often said, both in Italy and abroad, that in no other Western democracy would an elected representative be the subject of so many and so serious judicial investigations as Silvio Berlusconi is in Italy (and let’s not forget Spain) and not resign.
It is therefore surprising to read what the leader of another Western democracy (well, parliamentary monarchy), Tony Blair, had to say in his recent autobiography about the Italian prime minister in 2004, when he and his wife were his guest in Sardinia hoping to get Italy’s support for the 2012 Olympics (Tony Blair, A Journey, p. 552).
Blair has just told Berlusconi how greatly it matters for him to get the Olympics.

He said, ‘You are my friend. I promise nothing but I see if I can help.’ Typical Silvio, which is why I like him. Most politicians say ‘I promise’ but then do nothing. He said ‘I promise nothing’ but then delivered.
“Personal relationships matter [...] if you distance yourself on political grounds — for example because, like Silvio, there’s controversy around them — then fine, but don’t kid yourself: your own country’s the loser.”

A little footnote. The term ‘controversy’ is clearly a euphemism: in 2004, Berlusconi already stood accused of embezzlement, tax fraud and false accounting, and attempting to bribe a judge. True, Blair didn’t know about the minors he slept with.

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“Plans for life”

7 Aug

In Padua, the City Council has announced that in early 2011 it will be possible for young couples to apply for social housing on special terms. The plan is designed to stem the flow of young families leaving the city on account of its high rent levels. Presumably the measure is aimed at rejuvenating the urban-dwelling population by increasing the number of young people with children living in it. There are, I presume, sound economic reasons to do so. This means that same-sex couples will not be able to apply. This is OK, given the reason why this provision was introduced.

What is not so OK is the rhetoric surrounding the announcement. Particularly disappointing is the fact that it comes from a left-wing councillor, IdV Giovanni Battista Di Masi. Di Masi is quoted as saying that it would be ideal if all couples could benefit from this provision, no matter their composition, but that the exclusion of same-sex couples was necessary in order to avoid that any “two strangers” could take advantage of the special rates offered by the new bill by purporting to be a couple. Does he mean that a man and a woman would never pretend to be a couple in order to take advantage of the bill? That only two men, or two women, would?

He reportedly added that the provision was only designed for couples with “plans for life” (“progetti di vita“), a Sunday-school turn or phrase to mean couples who plan to have children. But the phrase carries another meaning, as it could mean “couples who plan to stay together for the long term”, and which seems to suggest that only heterosexual couples can have such plans.

Here is a measure which may well be justified socially and economically but is presented by someone who manages, I hope involuntarily, to sound discriminatory.

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Conflict of interest

2 Jul

We shall see the day Padania is a State,” Italian newspapers quoted a well-known politician as saying last week. For the uninformed reader, Padania is the name the separatist party known as Lega Nord (Northern League) uses to refer to the portion of Italy that lies north of the river Po.

The politician in question is Umberto Bossi, who is both the leader of said party and a serving minister of the Italian Republic, whose Constitution proclaims it “one and indivisible” (art. 5).

Not satisfied with having made a statement contrary to the Constitution to which he has sworn loyalty when he was made a minister, Mr Bossi went on to say that there are two ways in which Padania can be made into a free State: one peaceful and one violent; and that he prefers the former, because “there’s always time to resort to the latter”.

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