The Daily Telegraph

Search teams will keep looking for survivors of Genoa disaster

- By Andrea Vogt and Nick Squires

HOPES were fading last night of finding any more survivors in the tangled wreckage of the motorway bridge that collapsed in Genoa.

Search and rescue operations continued even though fire fighters and police were not hearing any cries for help from within the smashed concrete slabs, twisted steel and crushed cars.

“We are no longer hearing any audible signs of life, but we are not going to stop searching,” Luciano Roncalli, a fire service officer, told The Daily Telegraph. “Due to the huge slabs of cement there is still a chance of surviving in a big void inside the rubble, so just because we cannot hear anything doesn’t mean there is no hope.”

Richard Bordoni, a search and rescue specialist, said: “We won’t stop until we’ve removed every bit of cement.”

Emergency officials used hydraulic cranes to carefully lift away large chunks of reinforced cement, before trying to detect signs of life with sniffer dogs, cameras and listening devices.

“Everyone in Genoa knew the bridge was in bad condition, but as usual it is we citizens who pay the price for these national disgraces,” said Barbara Logrippo, 43, who lives in the area.

As Italians asked how such a large and crucial structure could simply disintegra­te without warning, details emerged of the people who lost their lives in the disaster.

Among the victims was a young Italian couple and their seven-year-old son. Roberto Robbiano, his wife Ersilia Piccinino and their son Samuele all died when their car plummeted 150ft to the ground after the 260ft section of the Morandi bridge suddenly collapsed during a thundersto­rm on Tuesday.

The family were heading off on holiday to Sardinia when the bridge, which spans a broad valley of apartment blocks, warehouses and railway lines, collapsed.

Firefighte­rs found Samuele’s favourite football, decorated with images of Spiderman, inside the crushed remains of their car, along with a bucket, a spade and a beach umbrella that was still wrapped in cellophane.

The victims also included Stella Boccia, 24, from Tuscany, and her boyfriend Carlos Jesus Truillo, 23, originally from the Dominican Republic. “A piece of our hearts lies beneath the rubble of the bridge in Genoa,” Ms Boccia’s parents wrote on Facebook.

The disaster claimed the lives of another couple – Marta Danisi, 29, a nurse, and Alberto Fanfani, 32, an anaestheti­st from Florence. They were due to get married next year.

The dead also included Luigi Matti Altadonna, 35, who was married with four children and was going to work when the bridge disintegra­ted beneath his vehicle.

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 ??  ?? Roberto Robbiano with Ersilia Piccinino and Samuele, left; Stella Boccia, above; and Marta Danisi and Alberto Fanfani
Roberto Robbiano with Ersilia Piccinino and Samuele, left; Stella Boccia, above; and Marta Danisi and Alberto Fanfani
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