Toronto Star

Italy storms kill at least 12

Firefighte­rs work on the partially collapsed road connecting Santa Margherita Ligure to Portofino. Authoritie­s across island of Sicily work to recover bodies, rescue survivors

- FRANCES D’EMILIO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROME— Storms lashing Sicily have killed at least 12 people with torrential floods, Italian authoritie­s said as the country’s leader headed Sunday to the stricken Mediterran­ean island. Divers pulled out nine of those victims from a home flooded by a rapidly swelling river in the countrysid­e near Palermo.

State TV broadcaste­r RaiNews24 said the sole survivor of the flood that ravaged the home with water and mud was the owner, who had just stepped outside to walk the family dogs Saturday when the torrent hit.

News reports said the man at first clung to a tree, then ended up on the roof of a nearby house. He used his cellphone to call for help but it was too late for the others, who included a one-year-old baby, a threeyear-old child and a teenager. The victims were from two families who had gathered in the country villa for the weekend.

A man’s body was also found on a guardrail along a Palermoare­a road after floodwater­s swept away his car, Italian news reports said.

Across the island, in the town of Cammarata, near Agrigento, the fire department said its divers were working to recover the bodies of two people swept away while driving on a road near the flooding Saraceno River.

Also in Agrigento province, firefighte­rs rescued 14 people from a hotel in the town of Montevago, which was threatened by floodwater­s from the Belice River.

Agrigento, famed for the ruins of ancient Greek temples, is a popular tourist destinatio­n.

Elsewhere in Sicily, at least two other people were missing Sunday after floodwater­s swept away their cars, including a doctor heading to the hospital in the hill town of Corleone.

Other storms had battered northern Italy earlier in the week, killing at least 15 people, uprooting millions of trees near Alpine valleys and leaving several Italian villages without electricit­y or road access for days.

In Casteldacc­ia, the hamlet where the river flooded the home in Sicily, neighbour Maria Concetta Alfano said she, her husband and their disabled adult daughter fled after barking dogs drew their attention to the rising waters in the Milicia River, the Italian news agency ANSA said. It quoted the husband, Andrea Cardenale, as saying he drove away as “water was up to the hood of the car.”

Rescuers retrieved the bodies from the home. A Sicilian prosecutor opened an investigat­ion to determine if any human error, such as possible inadequate drainage of the river, might have played a role in the deaths.

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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