‘The world came down,’ Italy bridge survivor says
GENOA, Italy — One survivor of the Genoa bridge collapse was in his car as it plunged 150 feet to the ground along with falling sections of highway and concrete.
He says he immediately understood that the structure was collapsing.
“It came down, everything, the world came down,” said Davide Capello, 33, a firefighter and soccer player who walked away traumatized but physically unharmed from Tuesday’s disaster.
Excavators on Friday began clearing sections of the collapsed highway bridge in the Italian port city on the Mediterranean Sea, searching for people still missing three days after the deadly accident t hat Capello said ended with an “unreal silence.”
Rescuers have been tunneling through tons of jagged steel, concrete blocks and crushed vehicles that plunged to the ground when the bridge suddenly broke up Tuesday during a downpour.
“It is very difficult to estimate the duration of the operations as we are going forward at a very slow pace and with a lot of caution,” said firefighter spokesman Stefano Zanut.
Officials say 38 people are confirmed killed and 15 were i njured. Prosecutors say 10 t o 20 people might still be unaccounted for, so the death toll is expected to rise.
Capello said Friday that he was at the midpoint of the bridge wearing a seat belt when it collapsed.
“I heard a noise, a dull noise. I saw the columns of the highway in front of me come down. A car in front of me disappeared into the darkness,” he said.
Capello’s car, a Volkswagen Tiguan, plunged nose first, then suddenly stopped with a crash, air bags releasing around him.
He said he saw only gray, as dust covered the windows.
After coming to a halt, he used the touch screen Capello phone in the car to call his colleagues at the Savona dispatch center, who sent help.
He then called his girlfriend and his father, a retired firefighter, who told him to get out of the car immediately for fear the car would destabilize or something heavy would fall on top of it.
He said the car’s windows wouldn’t budge, nor would its doors. But part of the car’s rear end had blasted open in the fall, so he climbed out, locating his phone under a seat on the way. Outside, he said, “there was an unreal silence.”
All around him he saw other cars that had been destroyed and piles of broken concrete and asphalt, but no signs of life. There were no calls for help.
Then rescue workers arrived and helped him climb down from the rubble.
“I got out with my own legs. I don’t know if anyone else managed to,” he said. “I was saved by a miracle.”