3 children trapped in quake rescued
MILAN — Italian firefighters working through the night, sometimes digging by hand, freed a seven-month-old baby Tuesday and then his two older brothers from the rubble of their home that collapsed when a 4.0-magnitude quake struck the resort island of Ischia during the height of tourist season.
At least two people were killed in the quake that struck just before 9 p.m. (noon PDT) Monday, while another 39 were injured and 2,600 were left homeless.
The victims were an elderly woman who struck by masonry that fell from a church, and a second woman who was inside a building that collapsed.
In the town of Casamicciola, dozens of firefighters worked for 14 hours to dig the Toscano brothers out of their home, where they were trapped alone after their father was rescued and their pregnant mother freed herself.
Cheers went up with each rescue, which firefighters confirmed with exclamation mark-punctuated tweets. The first was baby Pasquale, who was shown on a video wearing a white onesie and appearing alert as he was passed to safety, about 4 a.m.
It took another seven hours to free the middle brother, eight-yearold Matthias, who was pictured in his underwear and covered with cement dust before being quickly loaded onto a stretcher and into an ambulance, and two more hours to free the eldest boy, Ciro, 11, who was credited with helping save Matthias.
The children’s parents were waiting for Ciro at the hospital’s emergency room, his mother sitting in a wheelchair next to his father, Alessandro, whose hands were bandaged from a fracture.
“It was a terrible night. I don’t have words to explain it,” the father told RAI state television while rescuers were working to free the older two boys. “The entire second floor of the house collapsed, and the firefighters pulled me out. They were great.”
Hospital officials said all three boys were doing well, with the older two boys being treated for dehydration and the oldest for a fracture to his right foot. They were expected to be discharged from the hospital today.