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Franco Frattini (14 March 1957 – 24 December 2022) was an Italian politician and . He served as the President of the Council of State from January to December 2022.

Frattini previously served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2002 to 2004 and from 2008 to 2011 in the governments of Silvio Berlusconi and Minister of Public Function from 1995 to 1996 and from 2001 to 2002, in the government of and Silvio Berlusconi. From 2004 to 2008, he was also the European Commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security in the first Barroso Commission.


Education and career
Frattini was born in in 1957. He attended the "Giulio Cesare" Classical High School in Rome and graduated in in 1979 at the Sapienza University.

From 1984 he was and of the Regional Administrative Court (TAR) in . In 1986, Frattini was named member of the Italian Council of State and legal adviser of the Treasury Ministry. During these years, he served as secretary of the Federation of Young Italian Socialists (FGSI) and member of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI).

In 1990 and 1991, he worked as a legal adviser to the deputy secretary of the PSI, , in the Andreotti VI Cabinet.


Early political career
In 1994, Frattini was appointed Secretary General to the Presidency of the Council of Ministers during the first government of Silvio Berlusconi. However, in January 1995, the government lost its majority in the parliament and , an independent technocrat who was serving as Minister of Treasury, became the new Prime Minister. Frattini was appointed Minister for Public Function.
(1998). 9780275956127, Greenwood Publishing Group.

In 1996, he joined Berlusconi's (FI) and was candidated in the upcoming election within the Pole for Freedoms, the electoral coalition between FI, National Alliance and other minor conservative parties. He was elected in the northern constituency of . However, the centre-left coalition of won the election and from 1996 to 2001, Frattini served as chairman of the parliamentary committee for the supervision of (). Moreover, from November 1997 until August 2000 he was also a in .


Minister in Berlusconi's cabinets (2001–2004)

Minister of Public Function
In 2001, Frattini was a candidate for the Chamber of Deputies in the constituency of , supported by House of Freedom. From 2001, he took part in the Berlusconi II Cabinet as Minister for Public Administration. The so-called Frattini Act, namely Law no. 215/2004, on "Rules on conflicts of interest", approved by Parliament on 13 July 2004, received criticism from the Council of Europe's Venice Commission on its compatibility with international standards on freedom of expression and pluralism of the media.Commissione di Venezia, Considerazioni della Dott.ssa Sabrina Bono (Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri) sulla compatibilità della legge "Frattini" con gli standard del Consiglio d'Europa in materia di libertà di espressione e pluralismo dei media , 13 giugno 2005,


Minister of Foreign Affairs
From 14 November 2002 to 18 November 2004, Frattini served as Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs: the appointment of Frattini followed ten months of interim by Berlusconi himself, after the resignation of the former minister due to his contrasts with the foreign policies of the government.

During his ministerial tenure, Italy supported the by the led by president George W. Bush; Frattini called it a "legitimate intervention" even in the absence of a mandate. Frattini authorized the overflight and the use of Italian military bases by the Anglo-American coalition. Frattini later sent an Italian military and police contingent to Iraq, in what he called a "humanitarian emergency intervention," of about 3,200 men. This force made Italy the 3rd largest participant in the Coalition of the willing after the United States and the United Kingdom.

Italian forces took part in Operation Ancient Babylon which began in July 2003 together with British forces in the southern province, centered in the town of ; the Italian was charged with civilian administration by the Coalition Provisional Administration. A suicide attack there killed 19 Italians, among military and civilians.

During the Italian military presence in the south of Iraq, eight Italians were kidnapped, of whom two were later murdered: the mercenary Fabrizio Quattrocchi and the journalist , in addition to the agent , killed by U.S. soldiers during the liberation of kidnapped journalist . It remains unclear whether Italy offered a ransom for the release of the other six hostages. The killing of Quattrocchi was reported live on the late night Italian television program Porta a Porta, at the time of which Frattini was a guest in the studio, which raised criticism of Frattini for the lack of tact in not informing the victim's family in advance.

(2010). 9788852011740, Edizioni Mondadori. .
Frattini a «Porta a Porta»: cento minuti di bugie , di Luana Benini, L'Unità Frattini was later also criticized for saying Quattrocchi "died bravely, I would say as a hero". Ettore Colombo, Vita

In 2004, Frattini had to leave office at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which passed to following a government reshuffle. Italy's participation in the post-war occupation of Iraq remained unpopular within the Italian public opinion. At the beginning of 2006, the Berlusconi III government announced its intention to withdraw the Italian contingent from Iraq by the end of the year, a decision confirmed by the new government of Romano Prodi that succeeded it.


Vice President of the European Commission and European Commissioner (2004–2008)
On 4 November 2004, Frattini was named by Berlusconi to take up the Justice and security portfolio in the European Commission, replacing the controversial Rocco Buttiglione, whose appointment had been rejected by the European Parliament. The appointment of Frattini as European Commissioner for Justice, Freedom, and Security raised concerns from the British Liberal Democrat MEP , due to accusations of belonging to , raised by Buttiglione himself towards Frattini and denied by the latter. Frattini: Mai stato Massone , Rainews24 Frattini was also afforded one of the five seats as vice-president of the European Commission.

In February 2006, during the Danish cartoons row, Frattini defended the media's freedom of speech, though he did express disagreement with subject of the cartoons. Statement by Vice-President Franco Frattini on cartoons published by a Danish newspaper europa.eu In November 2006, the commissioner's concern for child welfare extended to video games, calling for tougher controls; anything relating to stricter self-regulation to an outright ban. ‘Violent’ video games: ban or self-regulation? euractiv.com In 2007, Frattini called for a ban on the horror title Rule of Rose, and criticised the EU-endorsed PEGI system for granting the game a 16-years-or-over age rating. Reports on showed he was seeking a Europe-wide ban on violent videogames. On 6 February 2007, during the Safer Internet Day 2007, Frattini recalled the need to protect children's rights, saying: "I am deeply concerned at this potential harm by the internet to children. This could involve people preying on them or children accessing racist, cruel or violent material." Declaration on protecting children's rights by Vice President Frattini on Safer Internet Day 2007, European Commission website, undated. Retrieved on 30 July 2007.GameSpot, 18 January 2007, Euro game debate gathers steam

At the start of 2007, Frattini backed an Italian push for EU support of a worldwide ban on the , while in April 2007, he asked for more powers to be given to , advocating the power to initiate prosecutions with a European Public Prosecutor. Brussels seeks more powers for EU crime body euobserver.com Moreover, following the 2007 Glasgow International Airport attack, he criticised the handling of Islam by member-states and called for a "European Islam".Goldirova, Rentata 06/07/07: Brussels questions EU capitals over approach to Islam EU Observer Interviewed by he declared his intention to promote online communications monitoring and of "dangerous words" like "bomb, kill, genocide or terrorism".

As European Commissioner, he promoted a "visa facilitation agreement between the European Community and the Russian Federation" (2007/340/EC: Council Decision of 19 April 2007), which however led to the expulsion of countless citizens Europeans domiciled for a long time in Russia on the basis of annual visas, which due to the introduction by the agreement of a limit of stay in the territory of maximum 90 days out of 180 were forced to leave the country, not being able to reside on the spot on the basis of unlimited annual visas as happened in the past. Article 5 of the law of the Russian Federation 25 July 2002 n.115, provides in fact the limit of 90 days of stay only to those who are not subject to the visa regime, but the agreement drawn up by Frattini extends this limit to all the citizens of the Union.

In 2008, Frattini joined the newly formed People of Freedom (PdL) and left on as Commissioner to run for election in Italy. He did not directly resign from his Commissioner post, to avoid that his successor be appointed by the out-going Prodi II Cabinet. He only resigned as Commissioner after taking up the position of Foreign Minister in the Berlusconi IV government. The role of European Commissioner from Italy was then assigned to , another member of PdL, with responsibility for transports rather than for justice. Frattini resigns as Tajani steps in. Frattini leaves Brussels for Rome Frattini was the second ever European Commissioner from Italy to choose Italian over European politics, after the resignation of Franco Maria Malfatti in 1972.

During his term as European Commissioner, Frattini was also appointed by Prime Minister Berlusconi to the coordinate assistance from the government for the conduct of the Winter Olympics in Turin 2006.


Minister of Foreign Affairs (2008–2011)
At the 2008 snap election Frattini ran in north-eastern constituency of Friuli-Venezia Giulia and was elected to the Chamber of Deputies. From 2008 to 2011, Frattini once again served as foreign minister.


Benghazi Treaty and migration policy
During the first summer of his second foreign ministry the "Treaty of friendship between Italy and " was signed (so-called Benghazi agreement); with this treaty, Libya under agreed to repatriate the boats of migrants from the Libyan coast to Italy. Cooperation between the two coast guards started in May 2009, with protests from international groups for the protection of human rights, which criticized the return of migrants – including eligible asylum seekers – to Libya, which had not ratified the UN Convention on Refugees; the policy was subsequently suspended but not officially repudiated. Frattini had openly supported the policy of respingimenti, contrary to the international humanitarian law principle of , Laura Boldrini su Repubblica.it describing such policy as a "due application of European rules", Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno , 10 maggio 2009 and stamping as "unworthy" the 2010 report by Amnesty International that highlighted the critical nature of this policy in light of international and European law.

In September 2010, on the occasion of the second visit of to Rome, Frattini declared "We have blocked the trafficking of illegal immigrants", despite the figures showing the continuation of migratory flows, and despite being mainly people entitled to forms of international protection. In February 2011, in a set-up changed by the uprisings, Frattini claimed to want to "mobilize the Mediterranean countries" and the EU, through the agency, for patrols and refoulements. However following the fall of the governments of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in and Gaddafi in Libya, the number of migrants attempting to reach Italy and Europe surged. Italy's response to these migrants has been criticized by organizations including Amnesty International and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The European Court of Human Rights, in the Hirsi v. Italy ruling of 23 February 2012, condemned Italy for breach of the convention, in particular with regard to Article 3 (prohibition of torture and inhuman and degrading treatment) and Article 4 of Protocol IV (prohibition of collective expulsions); in this case, 200 Somali and Eritrean migrants had been rejected in Libya under the Benghazi agreement, without having the possibility of applying for asylum in Europe.


Foreign policy
The reaction of Italian diplomacy, led by Frattini, to the revolts of the and the Libyan civil war was defined as "reactive" and "unrealistic" by the ISPI-IAI 2012 report edited by Alessandro Colombo and Ettore Greco.Alessandro Colombo e Ettore Greco, " L'Italia e la trasformazione della politica internazionale ", rapporto introduttivo dell'edizione 2012 dell'annuario La politica estera dell'Italia, ISPI-IAI, 2012

Like other Western countries, Italy was completely taken aback by the Arab uprisings, and after a first moment at a loss for words it tried to frame the phenomenon in the reassuring discourse of , reassured by the absence of Islamist symbols or anti-Western slogans. If the initial hesitations and the abrupt U-turn on the regime can constitute an element in common with other countries, Italy is the only international actor who long sought to "cling to its own imaginary role of mediator ", for which however lacked both power and necessary authority. With the evolution of the conflict, Frattini and Italian diplomacy resorted to the "usual option to follow the stronger allies", facilitated in this by the "dilution of Franco-British unilateralism in the multilateral framework of " and by the guarantee of U.S. participation.

As far as European politics is concerned, according to Colombo and Greco, the reaction capacity of the Berlusconi IV government proved to be "totally insufficient", in the absence of a coherent long-term and vulnerable strategy to the internal divisions of the majority and to a "persistent underestimation of risks ". According to Colombo and Greco, the attitude of the Berlusconi IV government over the EU was "particularly erratic", pointing to the Union from time to time as a mandatory external constraint, the cause of national evils, or the only source of salvation. This volatility led to the projection of an image of an unreliable Italy in Europe. Frattini and Italian diplomacy also lost the initiative in proposing themselves in Europe as an engine or co-star of pro-integration coalitions, dealing with Europe only in an "occasional and distracted" manner, and rather caring for important bilateral relations (with Russia and Turkey, for example), regardless of the international and European context, according to a "small cabotage" policy. All of this, coupled with the - duo's inclination to leave other actors out, led to Italy's exclusion from the main European policy initiatives. This deficit of attention to the European Union, resulting in a growing isolation, has also had implications in other areas of foreign policy: the difficulties in relations with the United States, for example, are traced by Colombo and Greco to the widespread overseas perception of a growing marginalization of Italy in the European context.


Controversies
During the Russian invasion of Georgia in the summer of 2008, Frattini was on vacation in the . The representation of Italy during the urgent meetings of EU foreign ministers was ensured by the undersecretary . Corriere della Sera, 13 agosto 2008 While at the end of December 2008, during Israel's war on Gaza (Operation Cast Lead), Frattini was on holiday again. Frattini's live interview with TG1 in a skiing suit raised controversy over inappropriate and disrespectful clothing. Corriere della Sera, Lina Sotis, 31 dicembre 2008 Corriere della Sera, 1º gennaio 2009

In November 2010, Frattini dubbed the revelations as the "September 11 of diplomacy" Corriere della Sera, 28 November 2010 and stated that "wants to destroy the world". AGI , 29 November 2010 The U.S. ambassador in Italy, , informed Washington, in a confidential cable distributed by WikiLeaks, of how Berlusconi "constantly refuses the strategic advice of his Foreign Ministry, demoralized, devoid of resources and increasingly irrelevant". Frattini's weakness was detected by the United States particularly with regard to Italian-Russian relations. Wikileaks , cablogramma di Ronald Spogli del 19 novembre 2008


Later activities
In 2011 Frattini was briefly president of the Alcide De Gasperi Foundation and from 2011 he was president of the Italian Society for International Organization (SIOI), an emanation of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Frattini was the first politician to hold SIOI chairmanship, until then reserved for diplomats and academics of the highest level. He later joined the "Institute of Eurasian Studies" and served as its president.

In December 2012, Frattini left the PdL, later defining the leadership of the new party, Forza Italia, as "extremists". In 2012, Frattini received the honorary citizenship of the city of .

Frattini did not run for the 2013 Italian general election, while supporting the "Agenda " and . Frattini later recovered his position as a member of the judiciary and Chamber President of the Italian Council of State.

Since 2013, Frattini was a consultant to the Serbian government of Aleksandar Vučić for the European integration of Serbia, succeeding Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Alfred Gusenbauer.

Since 2014, Frattini was a member of the high court of sports justice of CONI, a court of last resort of the Italian sports system. He exercised his function as judge for the Parma case, decreeing in May 2014 that the Emilian soccer team could not play in the .

In May 2014, Frattini was awarded an honorary degree from the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation for his commitment to the development of “mutual understanding and relations” between Italy and Russia.

Frattini was a candidate to succeed Anders Fogh Rasmussen for the post of 's secretary general in October 2014, but the post was given to .

In 2018, on the occasion of the Italian presidency of the , Foreign Minister appointed Frattini as "Special representative of the OSCE presidency for the process of resolving the conflict in ". Among his credentials, Frattini said: "I have excellent relations with the Russian authorities, which undoubtedly played a fundamental role in the resolution of in Transnistria," in addition to reminding all of his own role in starting the process of liberalization of Schengen visas for .

In 2020, while holding a sport judge position in the trial of the doping case of PRC swimmer , it was revealed that Frattimi had made comments about dog meat eating in China and used derogatory terms against the Chinese people on social media over a number of years. Concerns over his anti-China bias persuaded the federal court that Frattini should not have presided over banning the PRC swimmer.

As of September 2020, he was a member of the Italian .


Positions
Interviewed by in 2007, Frattini said it was his intention to investigate technical possibilities for implementing internet monitoring of "dangerous words" such as "bombs", "killing", "genocide", and "terrorism". The project did not see the light of day.

In 2007, Frattini was censured by the European Parliament for his statements against the freedom of movement of people in the EU. In the interview granted and published on 2 November 2007, Frattini stressed that, to respond to the security problem, "what is to be done is simple: you go to a nomad camp in Rome, for example on the Christopher Columbus, and to those who are there you ask" what's your life? If all year 'I do not know', you take it and send it back to Romania. This is how the European directive works: simple and without escape." The motion of censure, presented by the European left, was voted to a large extent: 306 yes, 86 no, and 37 abstentions. Ue approva la risoluzione contro Frattini, Corriere della Sera, 15 novembre 2007

In March 2009, Frattini condemned the 2009 Durban Review Conference, terming the final document unacceptable, since it included positions that emerged in the 2001 conference, which qualified as a form of .

Frattini later made declarations against , Corriere della Sera, 12 maggio 2009, intervista di Maurizio Caprara but in favour of the administrative vote for regular migrants, Corriere della Sera, 3 settembre 2009 and pleaded for a common European policy on migration. Frattini: «Immigrati, problema europeo», Corriere della Sera, 23 agosto 2009

In November 2009, he called "suggestive" 's proposal for a constitutional amendment to include a cross in the : "For now we wish to defend the right to keep the in our school classes, later we'll see if we can do more." He added: "There are nine European countries that have the cross in their flag, it's an absolutely normal proposal." Croce sulla bandiera, no di La Russa , , 30 novembre 2009

On 22 October 2010, he declared to the Osservatore Romano that , , and should ally to fight , which he defined, in the same interview, as a "perverse phenomenon" on a par with extremism. These statements raised criticisms of numerous commentators and members of , who requested his resignation. Frattini reiterated in 2017 that is the third threat to Europe after religious extremism and militant .

In November 2010, he defined the revelations of as "the 9/11 of world diplomacy". Corriere della Sera, 28 novembre 2010 and said that "wants to destroy the world". AGI , 29 novembre 2010


Personal life and death
Frattini died of cancer on 24 December 2022, at the age of 65.


Electoral history
Elected


First-past-the-post elections
Franco FrattiniPole of Freedoms36,51046.8
Ennio ChiodiThe Olive Tree34,91444.8
Others6,5318.4
Total77,955100.0

Claudio BressaThe Olive Tree–SVP37,57749.0
Franco FrattiniHouse of Freedoms32,17142.0
Cristina ZanellaItaly of Values4,0035.2
Achille Chiomento2,9223.8
Total76,673100.0


Honors
Frattini received Medaglia Teresiana at University of Pavia in 2008.


Foreign honours
  • Malaysia: Honorary Grand Commander of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia (2003)
  • Uruguay: Grand Officer of the Medal of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay (2003)
  • Russia: honorary degree from the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation for his commitment to the development of “mutual understanding and relations” between Italy and Russia (May 2014). Italian MFA, 19 May 2014


External links

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