Daily Dispatch

Survivors tell of ‘hell’ on bridge

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Rescue workers toiled through a second night on Thursday in a desperate bid to find survivors in the rubble of a Genoa bridge which caved in during a heavy rainstorm, killing at least 39 people and injuring 16 more.

A vast span of the Morandi bridge collapsed in the northern port city on Tuesday, sending about 35 cars and several trucks plunging 45 metres onto railway tracks below.

Italy’s government has blamed the firm that operated the collapsed bridge for the disaster and announced a state of emergency in the region.

Children aged eight, 12 and 13 were among the dead, Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said, adding that more people were still missing. Sixteen people were injured.

The driver of a green lorry left precarious­ly close to the edge told Italian media how he had escaped the “hell” of the bridge collapse.

“It was raining very hard and it wasn’t possible to go very fast,” he told the Corriere della Sera daily.

“When a car overtook me I slowed down... [then] at a certain moment everything shook. The car in front of me disappeare­d and seemed to be swallowed up by the clouds. I looked up and saw the bridge pylon fall,” he said.

“Instinctiv­ely, finding myself in front of the void, I put the van into reverse, to escape this hell,” he added.

Three Chileans, who live in Italy, and four French nationals were also killed.

The tragedy has focused anger on the structural problems that have dogged the decades old Morandi bridge and the private sector firm Autostrade per l’Italia, which is currently in charge of operating and maintainin­g swathes of the country’s motorways.

Deputy prime minister Luigi Di Maio said the tragedy “could have been avoided”.

“Autostrade should have done maintenanc­e and didn’t do it,” he alleged.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte also confirmed that his government would push to revoke the company’s contract for the A10 motorway, which includes the bridge, while Transport Minister Danilo Toninelli said the company should be fined up to à150-million (R2.4billion).

The firm, which said the bridge had been undergoing maintenanc­e work, however, released a statement refuting accusation­s of underfundi­ng of motorway infrastruc­ture.

“In the last five years [20122017] the company’s investment in the security, maintenanc­e and strengthen­ing of the network has been over à1billion [R16.5-billion] a year,” it said.

Survivors recounted the heart-stopping moment when the bridge buckled, tossing vehicles and hunks of concrete into the abyss.

Davide Capello, a former goalkeeper for Italian Serie A club Cagliari, plunged with his car but was unscathed.

“I was driving along the bridge, and at a certain point I saw the road in front of me collapse, and I went down with the car,” he said.

As cars and trucks tumbled off the bridge, Afifi Idriss, 39, a Moroccan truck driver, just managed to stop in time.

“I saw the green lorry in front of me stop and then reverse so I stopped too, locked the truck and ran,” he said.

While around a dozen apartment blocks that stand in the shadow of the viaduct were largely spared the impact of the falling concrete, the Liguria regional government said some 634 people had been evacuated.

I was driving along the bridge, and I saw the road in front of me collapse

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