| Home | News| Living in China| MMS | SMS | About us | Contact us|
   
 Language Tips > Newsmakers
Updated: 2005-04-21 08:59


Berlusconi resigns as Italian PM 

4月20日,意大利政局急转直下,总理贝卢斯科尼宣布辞职并向总统钱皮提交辞呈。贝卢斯科尼当天在参议院表示,辞去本届总理。他说:“我接受组建新政府的挑战。”贝卢斯科尼指出,执政党联盟中的所有党派都承诺将力挺新政府。

Berlusconi resigns as Italian PM
Mr Berlusconi is determined to stay in power

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has resigned, but says he will soon put together a new coalition.

He told the upper house of parliament that his party had a mandate to lead until 2006 and it would do so.

President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi asked him to stay on as caretaker prime minister , urging talks with allies.

Mr Berlusconi's centre-right coalition - Italy's longest serving post-war government - was rocked by poor results in recent regional elections.

Following a 40-minute meeting with the president, Mr Berlusconi told reporters he would move quickly to form a new coalition.

"Thursday morning we will begin the consultations and they will be finished at midday Friday," he said.

His government was plunged into crisis last week when the smallest of the four parties in the coalition, the Union of Christian Democrats, withdrew its four ministers.

Mr Berlusconi's main coalition partner, the National Alliance, also threatened to quit. It believes current policies are skewed in favour of the country's more prosperous north, represented in the coalition by the Northern League.

Correspondents say assembling a new team may prove difficult, as Mr Berlusconi risks alienating the Northern League if he gives more posts to the National Alliance.

"We have written important pages in our country's history," Mr Berlusconi said in his speech to the Senate, addressing the government benches.

"With your confidence and your support, I am sure we will write many more."

If Mr Berlusconi can form a new government he will avoid having to call a general election a year ahead of schedule.

Mr Berlusconi has said he is determined to serve out his five-year term, which ends next year.

Popular opposition to Italy's role in the war in Iraq and a struggling economy have contributed to a decline in the prime minister's popularity.

The regional elections earlier this month saw the opposition win 11 of the 13 regions up for re-election and about 54% of the vote.

(BBC)

 

Vocabulary:
 

caretaker prime minister: (看守政府总理)

skewed:  having an oblique or slanting direction or position(歪斜的)

 
Go to Other Sections
Story Tools
Related Stories
· Ratzinger is elected as new Pope
· Armstrong to retire after tour de France
· Prince Harry 'told to get with IT'
more
 
Copyright by chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved

版权声明:未经中国日报网站许可,任何人不得复制本栏目内容。如需转载请与本网站联系。
None of this material may be used for any commercial or public use. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.