Girolamo Sirchia Explained

Girolamo Sirchia
Order:Minister of Health
Term Start:11 June 2001
Term End:23 April 2005
Primeminister:Silvio Berlusconi
Predecessor:Umberto Veronesi
Successor:Francesco Storace
Birth Date:14 September 1933
Birth Place:Milan, Italy
Nationality: Italian
Alma Mater:University of Milan
Profession:Medic
Party:Independent

Girolamo Sirchia (born 14 September 1933), is an Italian physician and politician.

Sirchia was born in Milan. He is married and has two daughters. He obtained a medical degree at University of Milan, specializing in Internal Medicine and Immuno-hematology.

He was Italian Minister of Health from June 2001 to April 2005 and he is known first for a smoking ban (Sirchia law) in all indoor public places.[1]

On 2 February 2005 he was investigated for corruption, after the suicide of his friend Francesco Mercuriali the previous 3 October.[2]

On 17 April 2008 he was sentenced (first instance judgment) to three years of imprisonment for bribes in the world of health, plus five years of interdiction from public offices. Together with him the alleged corrupters were convicted, in particular of Haemonetics Italia.[3] The sentence refers only to the accusations concerning events after 2000, while for the previous ones there was a prescription.

On 3 March 2010, the appeal ruling confirmed the embezzlement in relation to about 300,000 Swiss francs taken from the Il Sangue foundation of which he was treasurer, but acquitted him of the corruption charge. For a third charge, relating to $ 10,000 received from Japan's Kawasumi in December 2000, the judges finally declared the prescription; other disputes for which allegations of corruption were pending had already been declared prescribed during the first degree. The penalty was thus reduced to 5 months in prison and € 600 fine: the Court of Appeal of Milan has therefore lifted the ban on public offices against Sirchia.[4]

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.lastampa.it/cronaca/2013/01/13/news/dieci-anni-senza-fumo-cosi-la-legge-sirchia-ha-cambiato-l-italia-1.36128185 Dieci anni senza fumo, così la legge Sirchia ha cambiato l’Italia
  2. http://www.repubblica.it/2004/j/sezioni/cronaca/mercuriali/mercuriali/mercuriali.html Accusato di corruzione Si uccide con una coltellata
  3. https://www.quotidiano.net/politica/2008/04/17/81319-sirchia_condannato_anni.shtml L'ex ministro Sirchia condannato a tre anni
  4. https://www.corriere.it/cronache/10_marzo_03/sirchia-condanna-appello_09bdfdfc-26d7-11df-b168-00144f02aabe.shtml Sirchia: pena ridotta per appropriazione indebita, assoluzione per la corruzione