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  • 2021-12-20 (xsd:date)
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  • Was a COVID-19 Vaccine Warehouse Set on Fire in Italy? (en)
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  • In December 2021, a video of a building fire was circulated on social media along with the claim that the blaze was intentionally set by members of the Italian military to destroy a warehouse holding COVID-19 vaccines in protest of a new mandate designed to encourage vaccinations. This video (which can be viewed below) truly shows a building fire in Italy. However, there's no evidence that this fire was intentionally set in protest of COVID-19 vaccinations. Furthermore, this is not a military warehouse where the vaccines were stored. This fire took place in the residential area of a military barracks. This claim started with a simple observation of a coincidence. This fire took place on the same day — Dec. 15 — that Italy extended its mandate for vaccinations to school staff, police and the military. Websites such as The Gateway Pundit published articles about this coincidence and claimed that it was suspicious. This suspicious coincidence would quickly evolve into an accusation as people claimed (without evidence) that this fire had been intentionally set by members of the Italian military in protest of the COVID-19 vaccination. As this ball of misinformation continued to roll and pickup untruths, people started to falsely claim that this building was a COVID-19 vaccine warehouse. While this video has nothing to do with COVID-19 vaccines or vaccination mandates, these claims were widely circulated on Twitter, YouTube, and Telegram by people applauding this fictional act of vandalism. This fire took place at the Salvo D’Acquisto carabinieri barracks in Rome. At least one soldier was injured in the blaze. In other videos of this fire, people can be seen climbing out of windows to escape the blaze. According to the Italian news website Rai News, the fire started inside a room that had been used as a guesthouse (not a warehouse holding a cache of COVID-19 vaccines). Military members raised the alarm and a few minutes later firefighters arrived on the scene to fight the blaze. While the exact cause of the fire is still unknown, it's likely that a short circuit was the cause. Roma Today writes: (en)
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