Italy’s new president: a quiet man marked by a tragic family history
Italian lawmakers have elected judge and legal academic Sergio Mattarella as the country's new president, an influential if largely ceremonial role in the southern European nation

Italy’s new president is a white-haired Sicilian who might never have got anywhere near the corridors of power but for the Mafia killing of his beloved elder brother.
Instead, Sergio Mattarella, the 73-year-old elected on Saturday to succeed Giorgio Napolitano as head of state, has plenty of experience of high office, having served governments of both left and right in a string of ministerial posts including stints at both defence and education.
During a 25-year parliamentary career he was also the author of a since-amended electoral law that bears his name.
Since 2011 he has been a highly-respected judge at the country’s constitutional court, picking up the strings from a pre-politics career as a legal academic.
Even now, with his air of a kindly professor, the bespectacled Mattarella appears like someone more cut out for the quiet exchanges of academia than the cut and thrust of politics.