The Phnom Penh Post

Italy weeps for quake victims

- Ella Ide and Angus MacKinnon

ITALY on Saturday bid a tearful farewell to dozens of those who died in the earthquake as the nation mourned the victims of a disaster that claimed nearly 300 lives.

President Sergio Mattarella, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and other leaders were among hundreds of mourners at a sports hall in Ascoli Piceno, capital of the central Marche region.

The hall had been temporaril­y converted into a place of worship for the funeral of most of the people who perished in the villages of Arquata del Tronto and Pescara del Tronto in the region’s mountainou­s interior.

Hundreds more stood silently outside, the sombre proceeding­s of the mass relayed to them by loudspeake­r, three days after the deadly pre-dawn quake which killed 291 people according to the latest count.

Relatives of the dead sat alongside flower-covered coffins, some draping themselves across them and sobbing inconsolab­ly. Others hugged each other as Giovanni D’Ercole, the bishop of Ascoli, implored them not to lose faith.

“Don’t be afraid to scream your suffering, but do not lose courage,” he said. “Together we will rebuild our houses and churches, together, above all, we will give life back to our communitie­s . . . the village bells will ring once more.”

Among the coffins was a small, white casket for nineyear-old Giulia, whose body protected her younger sister, Giorgia, 5, long enough for her to be pulled from the rubble virtually unscathed.

Giorgia was one of the last survivors to be rescued and there have been no reports of anyone else being found alive since late on Wednesday.

On Giulia’s coffin a little note had been left: “Ciao little one. Sorry that we arrived too late.” It had apparently been written by one of the firemen who rescued Giorgia.

“We will not abandon you,” Italy’s president told the mourners after earlier paying tributed to the “extraordin­ary effort” of more than 4,000 rescuers and volunteers during a brief visit to Amatrice, the small mountain town hit hardest by the quake.

And former premier Silvio Berlusconi also sent his condolence­s. “There are no words, only grief, solidarity, prayer,” he said in a statement.

Some 230 of the quake’s 291 confirmed victims were buried under collapsed masonry in Amatrice’s devastated centre.

Emergency services are confident they have accounted for everyone in the smaller outlying hamlets to the north of Amatrice – some of which have been so badly damaged there are doubts as to whether they will ever be inhabited again.

Aftershock­s

Many victims were from the Rome area, where former inhabitant­s of the mountains have moved for work, returning to family homes only at the height of summer.

At least 16 foreigners died: 10 Romanians, three Britons and one each from Canada, El Salvador and Spain.

Sixteen Romanians are unaccounte­d for, the foreign ministry in Bucharest said Saturday.

The bells of the Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi, which was destroyed in a double earthquake in September 1997 and reopened two years later, rang out in memory of the victims.

The government has pledged to support immediate reconstruc­tion.

But the clear-up operation has been hampered by powerful aftershock­s – more than 1,300 since Wednesday – which have closed winding mountain roads, damaged key bridges and made life dangerous for exhausted emergency services.

Renzi has declared a state of emergency for the regions affected, releasing an initial tranche of € 50 million ($56 million) in emergency aid. The total rebuilding operation is forecast to cost over a billion euros.

The government and local authoritie­s are to face intense scrutiny over why so many people died, just seven years after an earthquake in the nearby city of L’Aquila left more than 300 people dead.

That disaster, just 50 kilometres to the south, underscore­d the region’s vulnerabil­ity to seismic events – but preparatio­ns for a fresh quake have been partial at best.

 ?? ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP ?? Relatives mourn next to a coffin during a funeral service for victims of the earthquake at a gymnasium arranged in a chapel of rest on Saturday.
ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP Relatives mourn next to a coffin during a funeral service for victims of the earthquake at a gymnasium arranged in a chapel of rest on Saturday.

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