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CRIME

Tourist in Venice ‘kidnaps’ currency exchange worker

A visitor to Venice has been charged with kidnapping after allegedly holding a bureau de change worker hostage.

Tourist in Venice 'kidnaps' currency exchange worker
Central Venice. Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

Caribineri in Venice arrested and charged the man, a 46-year-old thought to be from Israel, after he reportedly shut the currency exchange employee in her office.

He had tried to exchange $100 into euros but became angry over the rate offered, local media reported.

He then tried to cancel the transaction before closing the shutters and allegedly preventing the woman from leaving the office, near the Rialto Bridge.

The woman was reportedly left “upset and frightened” by the ordeal, which lasted around half an hour.

She managed to call local caribinieri, who opened the shutters and arrested the man.

He did not get his money back, according to Italian media reports.

This is the latest in a long series of incidents involving visitors to the lagoon city. In one shocking incident last month, a gondolier was headbutted by a tourist in a row over selfies.

Meanwhile other visitors to the city have found themselves in trouble with police after breaking local rules on “decorum”, including two German tourists who were fined €950 and told to leave after brewing their own coffee next to the Rialto Bridge.

The relationship between Venice and its visitors is often strained, with the city's economy dependent on tourism but its residents increasingly frustrated with the crowding and disruption that comes of hosting 12 million tourists per year.

Authorities have introduced swathes of ordinances to regulate public behaviour, cracking down on everything from snacking in public to wheeling trolley suitcases to failing to wear a shirt. 

But many criticize the government for failing to regulate those profiting from mass tourism, especially the cruise ship companies that ferry thousands of people into the historic centre at once.

READ ALSO: No, Venice hasn't just banned cruise ships from its lagoon

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TOURISM

Italy’s Cinque Terre to make hiking trail one-way for Labour Day

The Cinque Terre National Park, one of Italy's most popular tourist destinations, is set to enforce one-way restrictions on a major hiking path on Wednesday, May 1st.

Italy's Cinque Terre to make hiking trail one-way for Labour Day

The restriction applies on the stretch of the Sentiero Verde Azzurro path from Monterosso to Vernazza, and will be in force between 9am and 2pm, authorities said in an update on the park’s website.

Hikers will be able to enter the path at Monterosso and exit at Vernazza, walking south-east, but not travel in the opposite direction. Other stretches of the Sentiero Verde Azzurro will remain two-way.

READ ALSO: The Italian tourist destinations bringing in restrictions this summer

The Monterosso-Vernazza stretch has “passages that are narrow and steep, factors which in the event of large numbers of people could lead to queues and potentially critical situations,” park authorities said.

The same rule was enforced from April 25th-28th, over Italy’s Liberation Day long weekend, and may be extended to the weekend of May 4th-5th.

The measure was previously trialled over major holidays in 2023, allowing “thousands of guests to appreciate the wonder of our territory in absolute safety,” said park President Donatella Bianchi.

The day rate for a Cinque Terre Trekking Card also rises from €7.50 to €15 on Wednesday as surge pricing kicks in. Find the dates when you’ll pay the most to access the Cinque Terre hiking trails on this calendar.

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