Man drives car into pedestrians in Italy, injuring eight

Paulin Kola
News imageReuters A silver car with the front mangled up next to a recovery vehicle, with police and police cars visible in the middle of the roadReuters
The car was driving at very high speed

A man drove his car into pedestrians in the northern Italian city of Modena on Saturday, injuring eight people, four seriously, officials said.

They included a woman who had to have both her legs amputated.

After the car came to a halt against a shop window, the driver emerged holding a knife and injured a passer-by who gave chase, before the suspect was overpowered.

The suspect, 31, has been identified by officials as an Italian national of Moroccan origin.

Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who cancelled a planned trip to Cyprus and described the incident as "extremely serious", visited the injured in hospital with President Sergio Mattarella on Sunday.

News imageGetty Images Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and President Sergio Mattarella pictured walking amongst a group of men and women in suits. Meloni, with blonde hair past her shoulders, is wearing a smart striped jacket and is gesticulating with her hands while speaking to the man next to her. Mattarella, with white hair and glasses, has his hands clasped together and is looking straight ahead.Getty Images
Meloni and President Mattarella visited Baggiovara hospital on Sunday

She also met Luca Signorelli, the passer-by who intervened, and thanked him for his actions.

"What makes an ordinary person heroic is the moment when the heart chooses to do good, even when that involves a risk," she wrote on X, and shared an image of them embracing.

The incident occurred around 16:30 (14:30 GMT), when the speeding car hit the pedestrians in Via Emilia next to the iconic cathedral of Modena, south-east of Milan.

The vehicle then veered left before coming to a halt against a shop window.

Signorelli had told Italian media he was trying to help the woman when he noticed the driver trying to run away.

He said he gave chase and the attacker turned on him with a knife in hand. He received a blow to the head and one on his chest before being able to restrain the suspect, with the help of other passers-by.

At a news conference on Saturday evening, the prefect of Modena Fabrizia Triolo said the suspect had been referred to a mental health centre in 2022 for "schizoid disorders", but had then "disappeared without a trace".

An eyewitness said: "We saw the car approaching, it was heading for the kerb.

"It suddenly accelerated - it was going at least 100km/h (62mph)."

"We saw people flying," the witness told Italian media.

Modena's Mayor Massimo Mezzetti said it appeared the driver "deliberately drove on to the pavement, hitting several people and crashing into a shop window".

"He then got out of his car and brandished a knife," Mezzetti said.

Five women and three men were injured.

The mayor said the suspect was born in the province of Bergamo, close to Milan. He lives in the province of Modena.

Italy's far-right Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who leads the anti-immigrant League party, named the suspect on X as Salim El Koudri, describing him as a "second-generation criminal".

Italian media say the economics graduate is unemployed and has no criminal record.