The man had been shouting at royal protection officers for five minutes at the royal residence’s north centre gate when the armed soldier intervened.
Witnesses told how the he strode 50 yards from his post to join the confrontation with the intruder, who has since claimed he was expecting a ‘private audience’ with the Queen.
The man, who has identified himself as Tosin Odunaiya, a 23-year-old Nigerian who came to Britain illegally, said he ‘presumed’ that the Royal Family would welcome him into the palace.
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Speaking to The Sun, he said: ‘I wanted to speak with the Queen and presumed the Royal Family would have welcomed me as their lost son.
Odunaiya, who claims the soldier, a member of the Coldstream Guards, ‘didn’t scare me’ said: ‘I was shouting louder and louder when the Guard came over and started shaking his gun at me.’
Passers-by reported how the would-be intruder said ‘Oh you’re a big boy now’ to the soldier – thought to be Scottish – who in turn replied ‘Yes I am a big boy’ before pushing him.
Royal protection officers then ushered the man away, though he was not arrested.
He told the newspaper that the incident on Friday was his fifth attempt to get into the palace, and that before he has been so sure of being allowed in that he brought a toothbrush with him.
Odunaiya claims that his past visits were made to lobby the Queen over Syria, but that now he just wants help going home to Nigeria – as he hates it in Britain.
It is unusual for soldiers to leave their post unless a Royal is under threat, as the Metropolitan Police are responsible for most issues related to guarding the palace.
But it is believed that the soldier who intervened has the backing of his superiors.
The Metropolitan police said that they gave the man ‘words of advice’.
A spokesman said: ‘An incident occurred at the north centre gate of Buckingham Palace at approximately 17.50hrs on Friday 4th April.
‘Officers from Royalty protection spoke to a male and he was given words of advice. There were no arrests.’
Scotland Yard refused to elaborate on why the man was not arrested.
A statement from the Army said: ‘We are aware of an incident outside Buckingham Palace on Friday and while no one came to any harm and there were no arrests, we are very clear that the Metropolitan Police lead on Royal Security arrangements including outside the Palace itself.’
Panics at the Palace: How intruder after intruder has scaled fences, stalked the gardens, been Tasered to the floor… and even made it to the Queen’s bedroom
Victor Miller, a 37-year-old DJ, was arrested last September in the palace grounds and was later charged with trespass.
He scaled a 12ft fence to breach palace security, before being tracked down and taken into custody at a location ‘open to the public during the day’.
The intruder is said to have made his way to the State Rooms where all the Queen’s priceless paintings by the likes of Leonardo da Vinci and Titian are kept.
Even more shockingly, in February of last year police officers had to subdue a man with a Taser after he brandished a knife outside the palace gates.
Talhat Rehman, 54, was filmed holding the blade to his own neck.
The middle-aged man walked through crowds of tourists clutching two large kitchen knives before police surrounded him and used a Taser stun gun to disarm him.
As a policeman shouted a warning call of ‘Taser, Taser, Taser’ to his colleagues, the knifeman allegedly lunged forward, brandishing a six-inch blade in a series of swipes, before falling to the floor as he was stunned by the electrical charge.
A particularly embarrassing episode in 2004 saw a protester dressed as Batman sneak onto a ledge next to a balcony in the Palace after using a ladder to get over the walls.
Jason Hatch, a member of the group Fathers4Justice, then unfurled a banner and spent five hours in full public view before he was arrested by police. The ease with which he had made it into the palace prompted an urgent review of Royal security.
Other breaches at the Palace include a 1994 incident when a naked America paraglider was able to land on the building’s roof.
The next year a student rammed the gates at 50mph in his car, and a more subtle intrusion in 1995, while months later an undercover reporter was given a job as a Palace footman on the strength of a fake CV.
However, the most egregious breach of Royal security was surely the case of Michael Fagan in 1982.
Fagan, then 33, managed to scale the walls of the Palace on the morning of July 7, climb a drainpipe and wander the palace before making his way into the Queen’s room.
He tripped several alarms, all of which were faulty, and was able to swig from a bottle of wine on his travels through the Royal residence. He was eventually apprehended by protection officers.
For a long time it was thought Fagan had been able to chat with the Queen while in her bedroom, but he later admitted in an interview that she had called security immediately.
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