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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

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Newly-elected president of Italy, Sicilian judge Sergio Mattarella, arrives at the Constitutional Council in Rome on Saturday. Photo: AFP

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.

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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.

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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.

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