BMW hands German Pope keys to X5 SUV
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Germany's BMW has handed the keys to an X5
full-size sport utility vehicle to Pope Benedict, the world's largest
premium carmaker said on Thursday.
"We are proud to be able to
provide Pope Benedict XVI with a BMW car," the group's chief of
marketing and sales, Michael Ganal, said in a statement following an
audience with the pontiff.
Benedict hails from the small Bavarian town of Marktl am Inn, about an hour's drive from Munich, where BMW is based.
Apart from a fleet of BMW C1 covered scooters, the official Vatican car
park only has one BMW 5-Series executive and one 7-Series limousine.
The well-known "Popemobile" by comparison is a modified M-Class SUV built in 1999 by BMW's arch rival Mercedes-Benz.
The first Popemobile was delivered in 1981 after the assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II.
Stepping up security measures, the Vatican equipped the G-Class with
the distinctive bubble in which the pontiff waves to the faithful
behind armoured glass.
"This vehicle is not the Popemobile," a spokesman for BMW said, referring to the X5 now parked in the Vatican.
Benedict -- Joseph Ratzinger -- was elected pope in April. The
following month an Internet casino company won a frenzied online
auction for a second-hand Volkswagen Golf once registered to Cardinal
Ratzinger. |