The will of the Italian former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, who died on June 12, was “opened” today Wednesday in Milan and its contents were read before two lawyers.

The notary, Arrigo Roweda, said characteristically to the journalists present “it is futile to stay here, you will not learn anything from me. I can’t say anything. You won’t learn anything today either, not tomorrow, not ever.”

Roweda had been close to the “Cavalier” for decades and Berlusconi had decided to entrust his last will to the notary a few months before his hospitalization.

As the Italian press writes, Berlusconi’s five children know everything mentioned in the will. What the Italian tycoon specified, however, regarding this movable and immovable property, which includes three television channels, a publishing house, an insurance company and a football team, has not been known by the media for now.

The main question is whether the total property, the value of which estimated at around 4 billion euros, will be divided equally between Berlusconi’s five children (he had two from his first marriage and the three youngest from his second, with Veronica Lario) and if the financial empire of “Mr. Tivi” will stay united or whether certain companies are to be sold.