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Man arrested after forcing entry into Vatican City


Photo by Pedro Mealha on Unsplash

Photo by Pedro Mealha on Unsplash

Source: Vatican Media

A man driving a car forced entry through the Santa Anna Gate, one of the main entrances of Vatican City, around 8pm Thursday evening and reached the St Damasus Courtyard of the Apostolic Palace, before he was apprehended by the Vatican gendarmes.

According to the Holy See Press Office, the man was prevented from entering the Vatican by the Swiss Guards, and then, after leaving the entrance, returned at high speed, forcing the two checkpoints of the Swiss Guard and of the Gendarmerie Corps.

A press release reads: "In an attempt to stop the car, the inspector of the Gendarmerie, on guard at the gate, fired a shot in the direction of the front tires of the vehicle."

Despite being hit, the vehicle managed to continue on its way. The gendarmes subsequently sounded the alarm for an incursion, and blocked the access point to the rear of St Peter's Basilica, to the Vatican Gardens and the Santa Marta Square, where the Pope's residence is located.

In the meantime, the car reached the St Damasus Courtyard: "The driver got out independently, and was stopped and placed under arrest by the Gendarmerie Corps," the Vatican said.

The Italian man, aged about 40, was immediately visited by the doctors of the Directorate of Health and Hygiene of the Vatican City State, who found him to be in a "serious state of psychophysical alteration".

He was held overnight in a prison cell in the new premises of the Gendarmerie barracks, as he awaited arraignment before the Vatican's judicial authorities.

The Holy See Press Office reported on Friday afternoon that following an interrogation by the magistrate and in the presence of his lawyer, the arrested man was taken to the psychiatric ward of the nearby Santo Spirito in Sassia Hospital where he is staying for treatment.

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