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Berlusconi starts sentence

May 9, 2014

Italy's former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has begun a period of community service following his conviction for tax fraud. As he arrived, the billionaire was heckled by a protester dressed as a clown.

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Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi looks on as he arrives to the Sacred Family Foundation, where he will serve part of his one-year tax fraud sentence by doing community service with the elderly, in Cesano Boscone, a small town on the outskirts of Milan May 9, 2014. The Milan court ruled that Berlusconi, one of Italy's richest men, must spend at least four hours a week in an old people's home. After completing the first six months, Berlusconi's one-year sentence will automatically be reduced to 10 and a half months. REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini
Image: Reuters

Berlusconi arrived in a chauffeur-driven car on Friday morning to begin his community sentence at the Sacred Family Foundation - a hospice for patients with Alzheimer's.

Before entering the building, the media tycoon was heckled by a trade union protester dressed in a clown outfit.

"To prison! We have one dream in our hearts, Berlusconi in San Vittore," shouted the protester, referring to an infamous Milanese jail, before being led away by police.

Last year, an appeals court upheld Berlusconi's tax fraud conviction -- leading to his expulsion from parliament -- and ordered him to work one morning a week for about 10 months at the Catholic-run hospice in Cesano Boscone, near Milan.

Reading, writing and games

Among his duties, Berlusconi will be expected to help out with a morning activity program for patients, including reading, writing and games.

Although the former premier has been warned not to use his work at the hospice for media purposes, officials believe his fame might prove helpful.

"It will be small steps so as not to make any mistakes. And then he could do all sorts of things. He could help with meals, which are tricky because sometimes you have to 'remind' the patient that they are eating," said Massimo Restelli, head of the hospice's care services.

"We'll see if Berlusconi's presence creates some kind of close bond, if he is a reference for anyone. The guests do remember things, even if that seems absurd to people who do not know the illness," Restelli said.

Studying 'cure methods'

The 77-year-old, who has also been banned from public office for two years, said in a radio interview on Thursday that he had a "big surprise" in store.

"It took me just 10 days to learn the different cure methods that can be used," he said. "What I can say is that I am looking around for all the latest cures that have been invented to allow people who are suffering from this grave disease (Alzheimer's) to do a bit more than what they manage to do today," he told Radio Capital.

Although Berlusconi was sentenced to a year in prison, a judge ruled that - on grounds of age - he did not have to go to prison. He was also spared house arrest, but is subject to restrictions on his movement and a nightly curfew.

It was Berlusconi's first definitive criminal conviction, although he is also appealing a sentence for abuse of power and having sex with an underage prostitute during one of his infamous "bunga bunga" parties.

rc/ipj (AP, AFP, dpa)