Italy’s Berlusconi denies ever paying for sex

ROME, (Reuters) – Italian Prime Minister Silvio  Berlusconi has denied ever paying a woman for sex, as he faces  growing political pressure over lurid allegations that he slept  with a female escort who was paid to attend his parties.

“I have never paid a woman,” Berlusconi said in an interview  with the Chi weekly owned by his Mondadori publishing empire.

“I’ve never understood what satisfaction there is other than  that of conquering (a woman),” he told the magazine, according  to excerpts sent to Reuters ahead of publication today.

The popular premier’s credibility has come under attack over  a string of scandals related to his friendship with an  18-year-old girl and parties with young women, prompting him to  angrily declare last week that he would not be forced out.

But the opposition and the influential Catholic Church have  demanded Berlusconi clear up the facts after a corruption probe  in southern Italy brought forward a female escort who said she  spent the night with the premier and had recordings to prove it.

Berlusconi has accused the media of mounting a smear  campaign before the G8 summit he will host next month.

His centre-right coalition has an ample majority in both  houses of parliament. But it turned in a poorer than expected  performance in European and local elections this month amid a  media frenzy over the scandals surrounding his private life.

Asked if it had not occurred to him that the woman in  question, Patrizia D’Addario, was a high-class prostitute,  Berlusconi replied: “If I suspect something of that sort of any  person, then I would stay a thousand miles away”.