Italian former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi spoke to the media after leaving hospital in September 2020
Italian former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi spoke to the media after leaving hospital in September 2020 AFP

Italian ex-prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, a dominant player in his nation's politics for decades, was in intensive care on Wednesday for heart problems.

The 86-year-old media mogul and senator, who has been in and out of the hospital in recent years, is in Milan's San Raffaele Hospital, a member of his entourage told AFP.

Italian news agency Ansa said he was admitted early Wednesday and that his current condition was "stable".

Berlusconi, the billionaire leader of the right-wing Forza Italia party, spent four days last month at the same hospital for what Italian news reports called heart issues, before being discharged on March 30.

"I have already started working again... ready and determined to commit myself, as I have always done, to the country I love", he said in a message posted on social networks on Friday.

He then posted a photo of himself on Sunday grinning in front of a vast lawn of tulips in his villa in Arcore, in northern Italy.

After dominating Italian politics for two decades, the "Cavaliere" as he is widely known in Italy, now appears visibly diminished on the rare occasions he is seen in public.

Long gone are the days of his infamous erotic "bunga bunga" parties with young starlets, which he has always insisted were nothing more than elegant dinners.

Berlusconi was in hospital for 11 days for Covid-related pneumonia in September 2020, after contracting the virus while on holiday in Sardinia, describing it as "perhaps the most difficult ordeal of my life."

The following year, Covid-related complications caused a series of hospital stays.

The one-time cruise ship crooner, who served as prime minister three times after entering politics in 1994, had open heart surgery in 2016 and surgery on his intestine three years later.

Forza Italia is a member of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's right-wing coalition government, although the party attracts only about 10 percent of voters.

Matteo Salvini, whose League party is also a member of the coalition, tweeted get well wishes Wednesday, saying "Forza Silvio, Italy is waiting for you!"

Berlusconi won a seat in Italy's Senate during general elections in September, nine years after he was kicked out from the upper house of parliament following a conviction on tax fraud.

He said he would act as a political fatherly figure to Meloni, but has made headlines instead for his refusal to cut ties with his longtime friend Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Berlusconi entered politics in 1994 and for millions of Italians he represented a golden age of the Italian economy and the self-made man.

He has held a soft spot in many Italians' hearts since then, despite a series of sex scandals and court cases that threatened to tarnish his image.

In his most high-profile case, Berlusconi was sentenced to seven years in prison in 2013 for paying for sex with Karima El-Mahroug, known as "Ruby the Heart Stealer".

It was later overturned after the judge said there was reasonable doubt that he knew she was underage.

He celebrated his latest legal victory as recently as February, when he was acquitted of bribing witnesses to lie about his notorious "bunga bunga" parties, after arguing that he showered the starlets with money and gifts out of pure generosity.

Long gone are the days of his infamous erotic "bunga bunga" parties with young starlets.
Long gone are the days of his infamous erotic "bunga bunga" parties with young starlets. AFP