Bangkok Post

Flags at half mast as Italy mourns dead

EARTHQUAKE TOLL EXPECTED TO EXCEED 300

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ASCOLI PICENO: Flags flew at half mast across Italy yesterday as the country observed a day of mourning for the victims of an earthquake that killed nearly 300 people.

President Sergio Mattarella paid tribute to the “extraordin­ary effort” of more than 4,000 rescue experts and volunteers as he began what was set to be an emotionall­y charged day with a brief visit to Amatrice, about 100km northeast of Rome.

The small mountain town suffered the heaviest losses in the disaster, with about two thirds of the quake’s 284 confirmed victims buried under tonnes of collapsed masonry in its devastated centre.

The elderly head of state looked visibly moved as he contemplat­ed the site of a razed house on the edge of a zone that has been sealed off by rescue workers for fear of further collapses.

There are fears more bodies will be recovered in Amatrice, a holiday spot that was packed with visitors when the powerful quake struck in the early hours of Wednesday.

And, of the nearly 400 people sent to hospital, several are in a critical state.

Emergency services are more confident they have accounted for everyone in the smaller outlying hamlets to the north of Amatrice — some of which have been so badly damaged there are doubts as to whether they will ever be inhabited again.

The one-street village of Saletta had fewer than 20 permanent residents but with its population swollen by summer visitors 22 people died there.

“Saletta will disappear like so many tiny places,” predicted Marco Beltrame. The 28-year-old lost his aunt and uncle in the quake.

Mr Mattarella was also due to visit the village of Accumoli before joining Prime Minister Matteo Renzi at a funeral for some of the victims in Ascoli Piceno, capital of Marche, one of three regions affected by the quake.

The first grieving families to bury their dead did so on Friday night in Pomezia.

There were tear-drenched scenes as hundreds of residents of the small town south of Rome turned out to pay their respects to lost relatives, friends and neighbours who included an eight-year-old boy.

A large number of the victims were from the Rome area, where many former inhabitant­s of the mountains have moved for work, returning to family homes only at the height of summer.

At least eight foreigners died — three Britons, two Romanians and nationals of Canada, El Salvador and Spain.

Yesterday’s funeral was for some of the 46 people who died in the villages of Arquata del Tronto and Pescara del Tronto, located in the mountains where Marche meets neighbouri­ng Umbria, Lazio and Abruzzo.

A local gymnasium has been transforme­d into a chapel, where bereaved relatives came to pray in front of 30 coffins.

Among them was a small, white casket for nine-year-old Giulia, whose body protected her younger sister, Giorgia, for long enough for the five-year-old to be pulled from the rubble virtually unscathed.

She was one of the last survivors to be rescued and there have been no reports of anyone being found alive since late Wednesday.

With emotions still raw, some families chose not to take up the offer of state funerals.

“Why attend? To listen to politician­s? They always say the same thing — that they stand with us and that it must never happen again ... always the same thing!” said one inconsolab­le woman after identifyin­g a relative in Amatrice.

Where they can, rescue workers have begun using heavy machinery to clear debris in the first steps towards the reconstruc­tion which the government has promised to support.

But the operation has been severely hampered by powerful aftershock­s — more than 1,300 since Wednesday — which have closed winding mountain roads, damaged key bridges and made life dangerous for exhausted emergency services.

 ??  ?? AFTERMATH: Firefighte­rs gather yesterday amid rubble and debris near the Sant’Agostino church in the central Italian village of Amatrice.
AFTERMATH: Firefighte­rs gather yesterday amid rubble and debris near the Sant’Agostino church in the central Italian village of Amatrice.
 ??  ?? TEARS FLOW: A women mourns next to the coffin of an earthquake victim, in a gymnasium arranged in a chapel of rest yesterday in Ascoli Piceno.
TEARS FLOW: A women mourns next to the coffin of an earthquake victim, in a gymnasium arranged in a chapel of rest yesterday in Ascoli Piceno.

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