/ 27 November 2006

Berlusconi collapses at political rally

The former Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, was in the intensive care unit of a Milan hospital on Sunday night after collapsing at a political rally with what was called a minor heart complaint.

Berlusconi fell to the floor with his eyes closed, 40 minutes into his closing speech to a rally of young supporters in the Tuscan town of Montecatini Terme.

He told them his aim was to forge his rightwing alliance, the House of Freedoms, into a single party. ”That is what I plan to be able to leave as a bequest of my political activities,” he said. Then he suddenly added: ”Now excuse me. Emotion is getting the better of me and I …”

His voice trailed away and he gripped the podium for support as he fell back. He was taken away from the stage by aides.

Later Berlusconi was taken by helicopter to Milan’s San Raffaele hospital. He thanked the small crowd chanting ”Silvio, Silvio” before taking off. His spokesperson, Paolo Bonaiuti, later told Reuters that there was ”no emergency, no alarm”, and that the former premier was in intensive care only because his cardiologist heads that unit.

”They found something on the electrocardiogram, something like an irregular heartbeat, so they want to keep me under observation for 24 hours,” said Berlusconi, who overcame prostate cancer in the 1990s. The incident was the latest indication that the conservative opposition leader’s 70 years are catching up on him, at a time when Italy’s government is looking increasingly secure in office.

Last week, a pro-Berlusconi daily quoted the billionaire politician as saying that he despaired of putting a swift end to the centre-left government of Romano Prodi and would never again run for prime minister.

Though his comment was later denied by his spokesperson, there is no doubt that his political fortunes are linked to the durability of Prodi’s government: were it to serve its full term Berlusconi would be 74 by the time of the next general election.

Earlier this month the media tycoon underlined his growing physical limitations when he injured his right knee after joining in the warm-up before a football game.

He underwent an operation in Antwerp and for some time after his return was walking with the aid of a crutch.

Berlusconi’s personal doctor, Umberto Scapagnini, said that the opposition leader had suffered ”a loss of consciousness for a few seconds, caused by extreme tiredness and the very great heat [in the hall].”

Bonaiuti said that the previous evening Berlusconi had been writing both his speech for Sunday’s rally and one that he planned to deliver at a big anti-government demonstration on Saturday.

”At midnight, I told him to go to bed,” he added. ”I spoke to him again this morning and he told me he was tired but that nothing in the world would stop him from going ahead with his schedule.”

Berlusconi, who lost the Italian general election in April by the slimmest of margins, originally had high hopes of unseating the centre-left in the autumn. In the senate, the upper house of parliament, the government has a majority of just one.

But Prodi can count on the support of most of Italy’s life senators, and is expected to overcome a key hurdle next month when the 2007 budget is voted on in the senate.

Centre-left leaders are already taking positions on a round of economic reforms to be introduced in the new year. – Guardian Unlimited Â