Times Colonist

Activist dyes Trevi Fountain water

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ROME — An Italian activist poured red dye into the Trevi Fountain on Thursday — 10 years after he pulled the same stunt vandalizin­g one of Rome’s most famous monuments.

Graziano Cecchini insisted the dye wouldn’t harm the fountain and was intended as a protest against Rome’s corruption.

According to witnesses, Cecchini climbed onto the side of the fountain and pour the dye in, turning the Trevi pool into a murky red lake. Police escorted him from the scene.

In a statement, Cecchini said the protest was a “cry that Rome isn’t dead, that it’s alive and ready to return to be the capital of art, life and Renaissanc­e.”

Cecchini was also responsibl­e for sending thousands of coloured plastic balls down Rome’s Spanish Steps in 2008.

By Thursday afternoon, authoritie­s had turned off the Trevi’s hydraulics and were draining the fountain pool to prevent damage from the dye.

“Actions like this display ignorance and a total lack of civic sense,” said the deputy mayor, Luca Bergamo.

During Cecchini’s first red Trevi stunt in 2010, a right-wing group claimed responsibi­lity and said it was to protest the cost of organizing the Rome Film Festival. It said the red dye referred to the festival’s red carpet.

The 2017 edition of the festival opened Thursday.

 ??  ?? Graziano Cecchini pours red dye into the water of the Trevi Fountain, in Rome, Italy, on Thursday. The activist says the vandalism was intended as a protest against Rome’s corruption.
Graziano Cecchini pours red dye into the water of the Trevi Fountain, in Rome, Italy, on Thursday. The activist says the vandalism was intended as a protest against Rome’s corruption.

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