Pubdate: Wed, 11 Oct 2006
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2006 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300

TV SHOW BLOCKED AFTER EXPOSING POLITICIANS' DRUG USE

ROME - Italy's privacy authority has suspended transmission of a 
satirical TV programme which found widespread drug use among 
politicians, but the decision only fanned the storm created by the 
show's report.

The programme, Le Iene, announced it had secretly tested 50 lower 
house deputies for illegal substances and found almost one third had 
taken drugs in the previous 36 hours, 12 of them testing positive for 
cannabis and four for cocaine.

The latest exploit by the Iene (the Hyenas), well known for pranks 
that embarrass public figures, was on the front page of most of 
Italy's newspapers, with politicians' reactions ranging from 
satisfaction to anger.

A reporter for the programme, pretending to be an interviewer for a 
non-existent satellite TV show, approached the deputies for their 
views on the 2007 draft budget, while a bogus make-up artist dabbed 
their brow between filming.

The cells collected by the dabbing were then tested for drugs. Le 
Iene is shown on Italia Uno, one of the three national channels owned 
by Mediaset, the broadcaster controlled by the family of former Prime 
Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

The decision by the privacy authority to block the programme's 
transmission, scheduled for Tuesday evening, because the tests had 
been conducted in a secret and illicit manner.

Several of the 50 deputies tested appealed for the programme to be 
aired, and right-wing member of the European Parliament, Alessandra 
Mussolini, the granddaughter of wartime dictator Benito Mussolini, 
said the decision showed Italy was governed by an illiberal "regime".

"The censoring of a journalistic inquiry is a grave episode which I 
will take to the European Parliament, it's an absolute disgrace," she said.

Italo Bocchino of the conservative National Alliance party, who on 
Monday had threatened to sue the programme makers, said in view of 
the public outcry drug tests should be conducted on every member of parliament.

"That way the voters will know if the nation's representatives are 
people who break its drugs laws," he said. The AN, which is in 
Berlusconi's centre-right opposition, campaigns for drug use to be 
completely outlawed.

Liberal pressure groups said the Iene had unveiled the hypocrisy 
behind Italy's stringent drugs laws, a position backed by Environment 
Minister Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio, leader of the Green party.

"Absurd laws have been passed which punish kids for smoking a joint, 
and then we find that among the highest political offices people are 
taking too much cocaine," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine