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Top secret military unit to guard skies above Rome during Pope Francis's funeral

Top secret military unit to guard skies above Rome during Pope Francis's funeral

Metro22-04-2025

A secretive military unit specialising in drone warfare will be deployed to monitor the sky over Rome and the Vatican during the funeral procession of Pope Francis.
As thousands of mourners descend on St Peter's Square, Italian authorities are enacting one of the most complex operations in recent Vatican history.
The threat level has quietly been elevated – though not officially – which has prompted a series of heightened security measures across the capital.
Among them is a special unit trained in drone reconnaissance operations typically used in conflict zones.
Franco Fantozzi, senior security adviser at International SOS, revealed to Metro that they will be watching the Italian airspace for potential threats on Saturday.
'I cannot name the unit – and they are secretive – so they don't even have a name within the military, but they will be watching the sky for drones,' he said.
He also said that a ban on flights of any aircraft will be introduced during the farewell to the pontiff.
With more than 30 years of experience in the Carabinieri, with command roles in units involved in the fight against organised crime and terrorism, Fantozzi can get inside the mind of those policing the Vatican and Rome during the period of religious uncertainty.
Alongside a watchful eye on the sky, authorities will be monitoring River Tiber that flows through the capital and focusing on the crowds made up of pilgrims and tourists.
Fantozzi stressed that there are several factors raising the threat level – including the timing, as the pope died on Easter Monday, and the overflow of tourists in Rome.
But this time the security challenge also extends beyond the borders of the Vatican.
Unlike his predecessors, Francis will not be laid to rest beneath St Peter's Basilica in a break with centuries of tradition that represents his legacy as a more liberal leader.
His remains will instead be transported to the Basilica of St Mary Major, on the Esquiline Hill, near Termini train station.
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This unusual final journey has triggered additional planning for the various police powers that are taking part in the operation.
Though Italian authorities have not shared official numbers yet, Fantozzi said that thousands more officers – including plainclothes officers will be deployed in the days leading up to the funeral.
This does not seem like an exaggeration as the parametre surrounding the Vatican is already swarmed with officers.
So is virtually every major intersection in Rome, turning traffic into a long nightmare.
This also means that every step during Francis' last journey will be under the watch of Vatican Gendarmerie, the Swiss Guard, and elite Italian units.
Currently, the Italian government has the threat level of a terrorist attack in Italy as 'medium/high', also known as Level 2.
While there have been no such incidents during papal funerals in recent memory, the risk profile is always high. More Trending
The funeral of Pope John Paul II in April 2005 drew more than four million people to Rome and was one of the largest gatherings of heads of state outside the UN.
Security appeared watertight, but about three hours after the funeral, an Italian F-16 fighter jet intercepted a suspicious plane heading to Rome's Ciampino airport.
The aircraft was forced to land after intelligence sources warned it was carrying a bomb, but this later proved false.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: I met Pope Francis – he welcomed me as a Catholic trans man
MORE: Why won't the Catholic Church allow a woman pope?
MORE: Here's why Pope Francis's ring will be destroyed by a hammer

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'Taking my rapist to court was worse than what he did to me'
'Taking my rapist to court was worse than what he did to me'

Metro

time7 hours ago

  • Metro

'Taking my rapist to court was worse than what he did to me'

When Danielle* was raped, it was by someone she knew. A few years on, she still finds it hard to say the word. It's no surprise given all she's been through – but the damage isn't just down to her attacker, she's also been left traumatised by the justice system. Danielle tells Metro that the day after her assault, she phoned the police only to be told by an officer: 'Do you really think it's a good idea to report this?' 'He explained to me what I was likely to experience and implied that I shouldn't bother. He terrified me,' she remembers. It took nine months for Danielle to find the strength to officially report her assault and another four years before the case went to trial – only for the defendant to be found not guilty. Waiting years for a rape case to go to court only to see the person who assaulted you get off isn't unusual in the UK. Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) statistics reveal that of the 68,000 rapes reported to police in England and Wales in the year ending 2023, only 5% resulted in a charge. Of that figure, just 2.9% ended in a conviction. No one, simple reason explains such low conviction rates; but ongoing beliefs in rape myths and the huge burden placed on victims to supply evidence certainly helps to create barriers and prevent rape survivors from rarely get justice. According to the 2021 London Rape Review, 65% of rape cases result in the victim eventually withdrawing from the process. 'Throughout my whole case, the person who gathered the evidence was me,' explains Danielle, who is in her thirties. 'For example, I'd spoken to helplines the day after the rape, but the detective said they had tried to gain the transcripts and it wasn't possible. It took a lot of time, but I managed to get the transcripts myself.' Danielle also discovered that despite calling the police the day after her rape, no record of it had been logged. 'Thankfully, the day after it had happened, I wrote about it in a Word document so I didn't have to rely on my memory nine months later,' she says. 'Then, about a year and a half in, the police were just ignoring my emails. Eventually, it took another person coming forward, with a report about the same person, to give me the strength to carry on.' Gina* also faced challenges the moment she tried to report her rape by a family friend when she was 17. 'I attempted to put it in a statement – the whole history on one piece of paper – but I have dyslexia and ADHD and I can't write everything down the way I want to,' she explains to Metro. 'Afterwards, an officer rang and said: 'We're not going to take it further. Reading what you've put, we don't think he's done anything wrong'. I couldn't catch my breath.' Gina begged them to take the case and eventually it was handed to a different officer who invited her to a video interview. However, on the day, the officer rang to tell Gina she had missed her 10am appointment, which she had noted down as being at midday. After tearfully pleaded with them the officer relented, on the condition she came to the station immediately. According to Rape Crisis, 6.5million women in England and Wales have been raped or sexually assaulted, but 5 in 6 women don't report rape The number of sexual offences in England and Wales reached a record high of 193,566 in in the year ending March 2022 UCL research found that rape offences have the highest not guilty plea rate of any offence (85%) and this has been the case consistently for 15 years ONS data reveals almost half of all rapes are perpetrated by a woman's partner or ex-partner, and End Violence Against Women have said that the victim knows the perpetrator in 85% of cases The ONS also found that more than 1 in 5 victims were unconscious or asleep when they were raped 'I threw clothes on and got a taxi, then the officer came out and said, 'Oh, sorry, you were right, it was 12 o'clock'. I felt exhausted before I'd even started,' she remembers. 'Maybe, if the police had asked 'How do you want to communicate this to us?' it would give survivors more control of their story.' Gina adds that she also felt the female officer in charge of her case gave her many 'false promises'. 'She kept saying that she would ring every Friday. But every time I would stand beside my phone, shaking, and she never called. In the end I emailed her and she replied: 'you do realise we're busy? It isn't just you'. 'I was really upset, and I started to become quite anxious about asking if there were updates. I almost felt like I was forgotten about.' The 2025 Code of Practice for Victims of Crime in England and Wales states that victims should be 'provided with information about the investigation and prosecution' and includes a clause that police must ask victims how often they would like to receive updates, as well as their preferred method of contact. It took two years before Gina was finally told that her case wouldn't progress to court. 'Their attitude was, we can't do anything, there's no evidence. That was it – no support, nothing,' she recalls. 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'Some have described not feeling like they had received justice, despite a guilty conviction,' she explains. 'Victim-survivors need to be treated with dignity and respect, know they have been listened to and believed. Yet critical support has been put in jeopardy by recent government cuts to victims' services funding, which has far-reaching implications.' Although police are mandated to investigate every rape allegation they receive, it is often a lengthy and fraught process, where survivors report being forced to repeat details to different professionals with varying levels of training. Julia* is one of the 50% of rape survivors attacked by her then-partner, and has experienced this. Her relationship involved narcissistic abuse 'which I know not everybody understands, but when you're trying to explain it to a police officer that doesn't have a clue, it makes you feel worse,' she tells Metro. 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His messages, his photos, his everything – they weren't of any interest'. At 85%, rape offences have the highest not guilty plea rate of any crime (this has been the case consistently for the last 15 years) and many survivors feel the odds are against them from the outset. 'I met my barrister for the first time about half an hour before going into court,' recalls Danielle. 'I said to him that I had called the police after the rape and he gave the detective a look like, 'why the hell do I not know that?' In that moment my heart sank; I thought, 'he's not done his job and there is nothing I can do'.' And it only got worse for her. 'Whoever was cross examining me, destroyed me. She claimed that I'd led him on, that it was my fault and said the actual physical rape didn't happen at all. My god, she did a fantastic job of tearing me to pieces. I have strength in me, I can speak up, but she broke me.' When the not guilty verdict came through, Danielle says her whole world 'collapsed'. 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' He wasn't convicted, but there are triggers I have to deal with every day – it could be like a certain song or a certain smell. He's living his life whileI've got this prison sentence.' * Names have been changed A Crown Prosecution Service spokesperson said: 'The number of rape cases we charge has more than doubled since January 2021 from 491 to 1,122 this quarter. 'Although the burden of proof is on prosecutors to provide the evidence to get a guilty verdict, no victim should ever be made to feel as if they are on trial. 'We are working alongside others in the criminal justice system to deliver a more supportive service for victims so fewer drop out of the process and reduce delays – and recent figures show we are making vital progress in both these areas. 'We now have dedicated victim liaison officers in every CPS area working with Independent Sexual Violence Advisors to help victims of rape navigate court proceedings, and offer them a pre-trial meeting with a member of our prosecution team to discuss the trial process and support we can put in place.' Chief Constable Sarah Crew, national policing lead for rape and sexual offences, told Metro: 'The effective investigation and prosecution of rape is one of the most important challenges facing the criminal justice system. 'We are working hard in policing to improve our response to rape and sexual offences, and all 43 police forces in England and Wales have signed up to Operation Soteria, a transformational approach to the investigation of rape and sexual offences. 'One of the key principles of Soteria is placing the needs of the victim at the heart of an investigation, ensuring transparency and communication throughout the investigative process. 'By providing better support for victims and shifting our focus to the perpetrator's behaviour, we are starting to rebuild trust and confidence, and we are seeing a steep increase in arrests and charges. 'If you have been a victim of rape or sexual assault, I urge you to come forward and report this to the police. Your report will be treated sensitively, and we will listen and investigate with respect and empathy. We work closely with Sexual Assault Referral Centres (SARCs) and Independent Sexual Violence Advisors (ISVAs) and we would urge anyone who is not comfortable with going to the police to use these independent specialist services instead.' APCC Joint Victims Leads, PCCs Clare Moody and Matthew Scott, said: 'It takes great courage to report a rape, so it is vital that victims and survivors of this terrifying and traumatising experience are placed front and centre of the criminal justice system. Far too few cases of rape make it to court and those that do can take years to reach trial, so the process must ensure victims are – and feel – listened to, informed, and treated with fairness and dignity if we are to encourage the reporting of sexual offences. 'Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs), elected to act as the public's voice in policing, are key to ensuring victims know and understand the support to which they are entitled, and to ensuring that the highest quality and consistent support is available. We provide vital services such as Independent Sexual Violence Advisers, therapy and counselling in order to help victims directly. 'As PCCs, we hold our Forces to account to make sure they are delivering their obligations under the Victims Code. We promote victims' rights and support them in challenging the system when things go wrong. 'PCCs fully support the government's pledge to halve violence against women and girls within a decade. In the meantime, it is critical victims of crime can access timely support as they cope with and recover from the trauma they have experienced and navigate their way through an unfamiliar and complex criminal justice system. We will continue to work with our partners to deliver the best outcomes for victims.' Do you have a story you'd like to share? Get in touch by emailing Share your views in the comments below. MORE: I asked my partner to choose the porn I watched for a week MORE: Married teacher posed as boy, 14, to get young girls to send him explicit photos MORE: The forgotten UK social networking site that wrecked and rekindled relationships

Footage shows immigration raids on nail bars, construction sites and restaurants
Footage shows immigration raids on nail bars, construction sites and restaurants

Metro

time7 hours ago

  • Metro

Footage shows immigration raids on nail bars, construction sites and restaurants

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Thousands of arrests have been made over the past year as part of Labour's crackdown on illegal working, the government has said. Immigration enforcement teams have raided 9,000 properties across the UK, including restaurants, nail bars and construction sites, and made 6,410 arrests since the election. The Home Office said the activity forms part of its fight against organised crime and efforts to stamp out the jobs used to entice migrant workers and asylum seekers onto small boats. Dame Angela Eagle, minister for border security and asylum, said: 'For too long, employers have been able to take on and exploit migrants, with people allowed to arrive and work here illegally. 'This will no longer be tolerated on our watch. That's why we are ramping up our enforcement activity and introducing tougher laws to finally get a grip of our immigration and asylum system. 'Under our Plan for Change, we will continue to root out unscrupulous employers and disrupt illegal workers who undermine our border security.' Craig Munro breaks down Westminster chaos into easy to follow insight, walking you through what the latest policies mean to you. Sign up here. Footage has been released of the raids, which included 36 arrests a construction site in Belfast's historic Titanic Quarter. Elsewhere, nine arrests were made at a caravan park in Surrey last month following intelligence individuals were working illegally as delivery drivers in the gig economy. Nine people were also arrested in Bradford in March as officers intercepted a popular illegal working pick up point in Naples Street. Eddy Montgomery, director of enforcement, compliance and crime at Immigration Enforcement, said:'Our work to tackle illegal working is vital in not only bringing the guilty to account, but also in protecting vulnerable people from exploitation. 'I'm incredibly proud of our enforcement teams across the country for their hard work, skill and co-operation on these often challenging but highly important operations.' More than 1,100 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel last Saturday, the highest number recorded on a single day so far this year. The latest Home Office figures show that 1,194 migrants arrived in 18 boats, bringing the provisional annual total so far to 14,811. This is 42% higher than the same point last year (10,448) and 95% up from the same point in 2023 (7,610), analysis of the data shows. It is still lower than the highest daily total of 1,305 arrivals since data began in 2018, which was recorded on September 3, 2022. This year is on course to set a record, with the 14,811 total arrivals so far the highest recorded for the first five months of a year. More Trending The Home Office said ramping up illegal working enforcement activity forms a key part of its drive to restore order to the immigration system. A spokesperson said: 'In many cases, individuals travelling to the UK illegally are sold a lie by smuggling gangs that they will be able to live and work freely in the UK, when in reality they often end up facing squalid living conditions, minimal pay and inhumane working hours, with the threat of arrest and removal if they are caught working illegally. 'In the latest move to restore order to the asylum and immigration system, the Government is also introducing tough new laws to clamp down on illegal working by extending Right to Work checks on those hiring gig economy and zero-hours workers in sectors like construction, food delivery, beauty salons and courier services.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Why I'm scared by a report about Britain's 'minority white' future MORE: Universal digital 'BritCards' on an app could soon be used to prove who you are MORE: Full list of 12 countries on Donald Trump's travel ban

TV fans have days to binge BBC's 'best crime drama' before return
TV fans have days to binge BBC's 'best crime drama' before return

Metro

time11 hours ago

  • Metro

TV fans have days to binge BBC's 'best crime drama' before return

One of the BBC's best crime dramas is returning for a second season this weekend. The Gold is based on one of Britain's biggest ever real-life heists, the 1983 Brink's-Mat robbery, in which six armed men stole £26million in gold from a security depot near Heathrow. The majority of the gold was never recovered and it's understood most gold jewellery bought in the UK from 1984 onwards contains traces of the stolen stuff. The brilliant ensemble cast is led by Downton Abbey's Hugh Bonneville as detective Brian Boyce, who sets up a police task force to route out the gold from the criminal underworld of south London. With all six episodes of the second season set to arrive on iPlayer this weekend, TV fans have just a couple of days to binge the first season if they missed it in 2023. The show defies the normal heist drama fare by plunging into that robbery in the first scene. The robbers only expected to find a small amount of currency, but chanced upon an amount of gold that would now be equivalent to around £100m. The rest of the first episode, and drama as a whole, then follows the hunt to find the gold before its melted down and vanishes – which most of it did. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Created by Neil Forsyth, the man behind Scottish crime series Guilt, the drama unwraps how the robbers quickly went ground as they sought to launder the gold. In the drama they do so with the help of gangster Kenneth Noye, played by Slow Horses' Jack Lowden, and a crooked solicitor, played by Dominic Cooper, who uses the cash to buy up land around the London Docklands. When the show first aired it was hailed as not only British TV at its best, but a modern crime classic and The Gold was nominated for a Best Drama Bafta in 2024. TV fans took to X – then Twitter – when the drama first aired to praise the the tremendous episodes and the show's knockout cast. @charlieray47 wrote that the show was an 8/10, tweeting: 'Stunningly shot, well-paced series that had me hooked. A gripping real story with a masterclass performance from Hugh Bonneville. 'One of the best British dramas I've seen in a long time. Only critique was a slightly rushed finale but thoroughly enjoyed.' More Trending @Cliff_Thompson1 added: 'The Gold is utterly brilliant – best drama I've seen in a long while.' @LW_Reviews said the show was a 4/5, adding: 'Riveting crime drama. May be one of the best performances I've seen from Hugh Bonneville & Dominic Cooper. 'While I thought Jack Lowden was very good I did feel at points his character was a bit too much of a anti-hero considering what happened in real life.' View More » The Gold season 1 is available to stream on BBC iPlayer, with season 2 dropping on Sunday (June 8). Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Casualty declares major incident as first look is revealed MORE: EastEnders confirms end of an era as huge change is confirmed MORE: Netflix is hours away from dropping all 6 episodes of 'traumatic' Australian thriller

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