Today's Brisbane (Australia) Times reports from Italy on what it calls an historic and potentially disastrous schism between Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the Vatican. It all began when the Italian daily la Repubblica began repeatedly to ask Berlusconi to explain his relationships with several young women, including an aspiring teen model from Naples. Berlusconi responded by filing a libel suit against la Repubblica, and threatened to sue several other newspaper. European media sharply criticized Berlusconi's attack on the press, and so did the Vatican by cancelling the annual dinner traditionally shared with the Prime Minister after the Perdonanza Mass, a centuries-old service for the forgiveness of sin. Berlusconi responded by cancelling his attendance at the Mass in the earthquake-torn town of L'Aquila. However he also began a counter attack using a newspaper owned by his brother to attack the editor of Avvenire, Italy's main Catholic newspaper.
The Berlusconi paper called Catholic editor, Dino Boffo, a homosexual and claimed he was being sued by the wife of a man he was in a relationship with. Boffo was supported by a public statement from the Vatican, but on Thursday, after issuing a detailed rebuttal and explanation of the allegations, Boffo resigned. He charged his opponents with ''media butchery.'' Brisbane's Times says: "The rift between Mr Berlusconi's administration and the Vatican is now being read as the most serious battle between church and state since World War II."