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CNS/WH - Francesco Chiappelli, PhD cns.med.ucla.edu | CNS/WH - Francesco Chiappelli, PhD ibs.med.ucla.edu | Francesco laserponcture.net |
Francesco Cossiga (born 26 July 1928[1]) is an Italian politician and former President of the Italian Republic. He was also a professor of law at University of Sassari.
[edit] Early careerCossiga was born in Sassari in the north of Sardinia.[1] He started his political career during World War II in groups of Catholic reference. His name is commonly pronounced Italian pronunciation: [kosˈsiːɡa], but it was originally [ˈkɔssiɡa], with the stress on the first syllable, meaning "Corsica"[2]. He is the cousin of Enrico Berlinguer. He has been a minister several times for Democrazia Cristiana (DC); notably during his stay at Viminale (Ministry for internal affairs) where he re-structured Italian police, civil protection and secret services organisations. He was in charge during the kidnapping and murdering of Aldo Moro by Red Brigades and resigned when Moro was found dead in 1978. [edit] Election as President of Italian Senate of RepublicDuring the ninth republican legislature, he was elected President of Italian Senate 12 July 1983, a position he held until 24 June 1985, when he became President of Italian Republic. [edit] Election as President of ItalyResigning from his post, he earned the respect of the opposition (in particular of the Italian Communist Party) because he appeared as the only member of the government who took responsibility for the tragic conclusion of the events. This led to his election in 1985 as President of the Republic (Head of State), in which for the first time ever a candidate won at the first ballot (where a majority of over ⅔ is necessary, which would subsequently decrease in later ballots). The only other president of the Italian Republic elected at the first ballot was Carlo Azeglio Ciampi in 1999. [edit] The Cossiga PresidencyCossiga's presidency was unremarkable for its first five years, as most presidents until then refrained entering the open political debate in order to remain figures of reference for the whole nation. However, in his last two years as a President, Cossiga began to express opinions, at times virulent, against the Italian political system. In his opinion, Italian parties, and especially DC and PCI, had to take into account the deep change that the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War have brought. These declarations, soon dubbed "esternazioni", or "mattock blows" (picconate), were considered by many inappropriate for a President and, often, beyond his constitutional powers (like threatening to dissolve the Parliament to change government policies or threatening to stop sittings of the CSM - the self-governing council of Italian judiciary -, with police force if it was going to debate "sensitive" informations). Cossiga declared he was just "taking pleasure in removing some sand from my shoes". Cossiga was supported by the secretary of the Italian Socialist Party, Bettino Craxi. Tension developed between Cossiga and the President of the Council of Ministers Giulio Andreotti emerged when Andreotti revealed the existence of Gladio, a Stay-behind organization with the official aim of countering a possible Soviet invasion through sabotage and guerrilla warfare behind enemy lines. Cossiga declared his involvement in the setup of the organization. The Communist Party started a procedure for impeachment (Presidents of Italy can be impeached only for high treason against the State or Attempt to overthrow the Constitution). Though he threatened to stop his impeachment procedure with the dissolution of the Parliament, in the end the request of impeachment was dismissed and Cossiga was never impeached. Cossiga resigned two months before the end of his term, on 28 April 1992. He was voted again for president by the Italian Social Movement, which had supported him in his campaigns. [edit] Life senatorAfter his resignation from Quirinale (the Roman hill in which is the office of the Head of State), he is a lifetime senator, like all the former Presidents of the Republic, since 1992. His current title is President Emeritus of the Italian Republic. In February 1998 Cossiga created the UDR party (Unione Democratica per la Repubblica), declarately a centrist political formation. The UDR was a crucial component of the majority that supported the D'Alema government in October 1998, after the fall of the Prodi government which lost a confidence vote. Cossiga declared that his support for D'Alema was meant to end the conventional exclusion of the former Communist Party (PCI) leaders from the premiership in Italy. In 1999 UDR was dissolved. Cossiga returned to his senator for life activity, with a prominent interest in security matters, as his parliamentary record shows (see [1]). He remains a vocal commentator of Italian politics. In May 2006 he brought in a bill that would allow the region of South Tyrol to hold a referendum, where the local electorate could decide whether to a) stay with the Republic of Italy, b) become fully independent, c) return to Austria, d) or become a part of Germany. [3] On 27 November 2006, he resigned from his position as lifetime senator. His resignation was however rejected on 31 January 2007 by a vote of the Senate. [edit] Statements to Corriere della Sera regarding 9/11In an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera[4] Cossiga made some interesting comments regarding the alleged Osama Bin Laden 9/11 confession video of 13 December 2001:
[edit] References
Categories: 1928 births | Living people | People from Sassari | Fellows of Oriel College, Oxford | Members of Democrazia Cristiana | Italian Ministers of the Interior | Presidents of Italy | Prime Ministers of Italy | Presidents of the Italian Senate | Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath | Italian Life Senators | Italian Roman Catholics | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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