The Hamilton Spectator

Search continues following bridge collapse

Politician­s hunting for blame after Morandi Bridge collapse killed 39

- FRANCES D’EMILIO, COLLEEN BARRY AND PAOLO SANTALUCIA

GENOA, ITALY — As more bodies were pulled Wednesday from a mountain of jagged concrete and twisted steel left by a highway bridge collapse that killed 39, prosecutor­s focused on possible design flaws and past maintenanc­e of the heavily used span, and politician­s squabbled over blame.

Motorists, meanwhile, recounted miraculous escapes and the horror of seeing others plunge over the edge.

As a second night descended on the site where part of the Morandi Bridge plunged 45 metres (150 feet), Interior Minister Matteo Salvini declined to say how many people might still be buried in the debris where about 1,000 rescue workers searched for victims.

The collapse occurred about midday Tuesday, the eve of Italy’s biggest summer holiday, when traffic was particular­ly busy on the 51-year-old span that links two highways — one leading to France, the other to Milan — from this northweste­rn port city.

Salvini declined to say how many people are still missing, and he added that trying to locate them was particular­ly difficult, due to the holiday.

“It’s not easy to distinguis­h between who doesn’t respond because they are on the other side of the world and turned off their phone to relax” on vacation, and “who’s not responding because they are under the rubble,” he said.

He said he hoped the death toll would not rise.

“Miracles are still possible,” Salvini said.

Authoritie­s urged the quick removal of tons of debris from a dry riverbed so that the rubble doesn’t create a makeshift dam if heavy rains fall in the floodprone city on the Mediterran­ean.

Debris also must be cleared from railroad tracks, a vital link especially now that Genoa is largely cut in half by the loss of such a key artery, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said.

Authoritie­s worried about the stability of remaining large sections of the bridge, prompting a wider evacuation order and forcing about 630 people from nearby apartments, some practicall­y in the shadow of the elevated highway. Firefighte­rs went inside some of the vacated apartments briefly to retrieve documents

and, in at least one home, pet cats.

Building a new bridge could require razing the evacuated buildings, said Danilo Toninelli, minister of transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture.

After leading an emergency Cabinet meeting in Genoa, Conte said there were 39 confirmed dead and 16 injured, including nine in serious condition. Three children were among those killed, Salvini said.

The dead included four French citizens travelling to a music festival and two Albanians.

Genoa prosecutor Francesco Cozzi told reporters the investigat­ion into the collapse was focused on human causes, specifical­ly any possible design flaws in the bridge’s constructi­on or any inadequate maintenanc­e.

He said he didn’t know who might be responsibl­e, but added: “It wasn’t an accident.”

Asked if authoritie­s had any warning the bridge could be dangerous, Cozzi said no serious safety concerns had reached his office before the collapse.

Otherwise, “none of us would have driven over that highway 20 times a month, as we do,” he said.

A 20 million-euro ($29.8 million) project to upgrade the bridge’s safety had already been approved, with public bids to be submitted by September. According to business daily Il Sole, improvemen­ts would have involved two weight-bearing columns that support the bridge — including one that collapsed Tuesday.

The bridge, considered innovative when it opened in 1967 for its use of concrete around its cables, was long due for an upgrade, especially since it was more heavily trafficked than its designers had envisioned.

One expert, Antonio Brencich at the University of Genoa, had previously called the bridge “a failure of engineerin­g.” Other engineers, noting its age, said corrosion and decades of wearand-tear from weather also could have been factors in the collapse.

Italian politician­s pointed fingers at possible culprits.

Conte said the government wouldn’t wait until the investigat­ion was completed to revoke the concession of a private company, Autostrade Per L’Italia, that operates many of the nation’s toll highways. The next company would be held to “more stringent” rules for maintenanc­e.

Residents near the bridge told RAI state TV they would hear maintenanc­e work being done almost nightly.

Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio, of the anti-business Five Star Movement, alleged Autostraad­e’s holding company took profits “instead of investing money for maintenanc­e.”

Toninelli, the transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture minister and another populist Five Star leader, said his ministry had started procedures so Autostrade could be fined up to 150 million euros ($223.7million).

One of the widely-circulated images of the disaster was a green truck poised on the edge of the span.

A truck driver identified only as Idris who was behind that vehicle said it was saved only because of a motorist who tried to pass it moments earlier. The driver of the green truck apparently had to hit his brakes because of the passing car and was able to stop in time, he added.

“That truck driver is the luckiest in the world,” Idris told Sky TG24.

 ?? NICOLA MARFISI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers inspect the buildings that were evacuated in the area around the collapsed Morandi highway bridge, in Genoa, northern Italy, Wednesday.
NICOLA MARFISI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers inspect the buildings that were evacuated in the area around the collapsed Morandi highway bridge, in Genoa, northern Italy, Wednesday.

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