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Italian Man Tries To Avoid Getting COVID Jab With Fake Silicone Arm

The 50-year-old anti-vaxxer tried to trick healthcare workers with a silicone limb so he could get a vaccine passport. He failed.
Italian Anti-Vaxxer Tries To Get COVID Jab Using A Fake Arm
Photo: Bing Guan/Bloomberg

A man in northern Italy brought a silicone arm to his COVID-19 vaccination in an attempt to obtain a green pass without actually getting the vaccine.

A green pass is Italy’s digital COVID-19 certificate which allows the holder, who has been vaccinated, has recently tested negative for the virus or has recently recovered, to enter busy indoor spaces as well as workplaces. 

The 50-year-old, who arrived at the clinic in Biella, Piemonte, was questioned after a healthcare worker became immediately suspicious about the colour and feel of his arm. 

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He was asked to show his entire arm – and then promptly reported to the carabinieri, the Italian police, for fraud.

“This case borders on being ridiculous, were it not for the fact that we’re talking about an extremely serious act,” said the president of the Piemonte Region Alberto Cirio and the councillor for health Luigi Genesio Icardi in a joint statement, calling it “unacceptable in light of the sacrifice that the pandemic is making everyone in our community pay.” 

The Local Health Authority of Biella also reported that “similar events occur now because those who are coming to get their first does now essentially belong to three categories: those who have delayed it for health reasons and have a medical certificate, the doubters who have been convinced, and the rest who are opposed to it but need a Green Pass and then invent these things.” 

Earlier this month, the Italian government cracked down on the No Green Pass movement by banning its protests from city centres. 

In Novara, northwest Italy, anti-green pass protestors dressed as Auschwitz prisoners, comparing Italy’s mandate for workers with the Holocaust. 

The nation’s health minister Roberto Speranza called the protests “shocking” and Noemi Di Segni, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, said “we have witnessed an abuse and an offence to memory.”