The Secret Door at Palazzo Grazioli: A New Discovery by the Foreign Press Association

The Secret Door at Palazzo Grazioli: A New Discovery by the Foreign Press Association
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Monday 25 March 2024, 18:53 - Last updated: 18:59
A secret door at Palazzo Grazioli, which was the residence (from 1995 to 2020) of Silvio Berlusconi, has recently become the headquarters of the Foreign Press Association in Italy. The new "tenants", some journalists who have recently moved in after relocating from Via dell'Umiltà, discovered it. The correspondent for The Times of London, Tom Kington, reported this through a video published on X. "The secret door leads to a back staircase. A good way to allow party guests to leave quickly?", wrote the journalist. The discovery comes six days after the Foreign Press Association's entry into the headquarters, the historic organization that has 450 correspondents from all over the world, representing 55 countries and 350 media outlets, and boasts 112 years of existence. "The new headquarters - they wrote in the note of March 19 - is located in one of the most important historic buildings of the Capital, still belonging to the noble Roman family of the Graziolis, with an original structure dating back to the '600s and occupies the same premises that for years have been the Roman residence and political office of the former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi." "We are proud and happy about our new headquarters - said President Esma Çakır - which will give us new energy to tell the world about Italy, the wonderful country that hosts us with great generosity."
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