The Peterborough Examiner

Investigat­ion begins

Bishop gives veiled criticism of suspected shoddy constructi­on in quake-hit Italy

- ANDREA ROSA and NICOLE WINFIELD ASSOCIATED PRESS

AMATRICE, Italy — An Italian bishop issued a veiled critique of the suspected shoddy constructi­on behind the high death toll of Italy’s earthquake and warned during a state funeral Tuesday that the rebuilding effort must not become a “looting” of state coffers.

“Earthquake­s don’t kill. What kills the most is the work of man,” Rieti Bishop Domenico Pompili told the weeping crowds gathered in the shadow of Amatrice’s ruins for the funeral for some of the 292 victims.

Wails echoed under the roof of the open-sided tent as Pompili read aloud the names of the 242 people killed in the towns of Amatrice and Accumoli at the start of the service. And the crowd erupted in applause — a common gesture at Italian funerals — when dozens of white balloons were released at the end of the service.

On hand to concelebra­te the mass was Monsignor Konrad Krajewski, Pope Francis’ chief almsgiver who frequently stands in for him when he wants to show his personal closeness to people in need. Francis has promised to visit the quake zone.

Officials said only 37 caskets were on hand since many families opted for private funerals elsewhere. Another 50 people were killed in the neighbouri­ng Le Marche region where a state funeral was held on the weekend.

The 37 caskets faced the altar in rows, two little white caskets sandwiched between larger ones — evidence of the many children enjoying the final days of summer children who were killed. Relatives placed flowers on the caskets and sat next to them quietly as rain fell outside.

In his homily, Pompili insisted that there was no choice but to rebuild Amatrice and Accumoli since abandoning the towns would “kill them a second time.” But he warned that the reconstruc­tion effort must not become “a political fight or a sort of looting of various forms.”

Italy has a long history of organized crime and corrupt builders infiltrati­ng public works contracts, especially those earmarked for reconstruc­tion after natural disasters. Prosecutor­s have opened an investigat­ion into the Aug. 24 quake since many buildings crumbled despite having been renovated with public funds for anti-seismic improvemen­ts.

The ANSA news agency said Rieti chief prosecutor Giuseppe Saieva ordered Amatrice’s collapsed elementary school to be sequestere­d on Tuesday and entrusted Italy’s financial police with investigat­ing how public funds destined for anti-seismic renovation­s across the region were used.

The school collapsed during the quake despite being renovated in 2012 using earthquake funds. In addition, the church tower in nearby Accumoli collapsed on a home, killing a family of four, despite also having been recently renovated. Italian news reports, meanwhile, have said that many other buildings in the area were flagged as being at high seismic risk, and yet nothing was done to them despite having funds made available.

Amatrice Mayor Sergio Pirozzi, who was the first to give state radio the alarm minutes after the 3:36 a.m. quake that “the town isn’t here anymore,” wept as he recalled those who died.

“When I heard the names of the victims (at the start of mass), it was the butcher, the baker, the beekeeper, the girl who went to school with my children,” he said to applause at the end of the service. “You can imagine the pain.”

Echoing the bishop, he insisted that Amatrice must be rebuilt where it is, and not allow a “new town” to be rebuilt nearby.

“These people died because they loved this land and we want to stay,” he said.

 ?? ANDREAS SOLARO/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman kneels next to the coffin of a relative in Amatrice, Italy, on Tuesday, prior to a funeral ceremony for the victims of last week’s earthquake, which killed 292 people.
ANDREAS SOLARO/GETTY IMAGES A woman kneels next to the coffin of a relative in Amatrice, Italy, on Tuesday, prior to a funeral ceremony for the victims of last week’s earthquake, which killed 292 people.

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