The Columbus Dispatch

Flash flood in Italian gorge kills at least 8

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MILAN — Heavy rain flooded a gorge filled with hikers Monday in the southern region of Calabria, killing at least eight, Italy’s civil protection agency said. At least another five were missing.

The prefect’s office said 23 people were rescued from the flash flood in the Raganello Gorge. They included a 10-year-old boy treated for hypothermi­a who was among seven that the civil protection agency said were hospitaliz­ed.

It was unclear how many people were missing, but there were at least 36 hikers in two Rescuers work Monday in the Raganello Gorge in Civita, Italy, where at least eight people died in a flash flood.

organized groups inside the 7-mile-long gorge, a popular

aquatic trekking spot. TV images show rescuers scaling down the side of a steep rock face to bring hikers to safety.

Guides are not required, making it impossible to know how many people were on their own inside the canyon.

At its most narrow point, the gorge is just yards wide and with walls varying from 1,300 to 2,300 feet in height.

Luca Franzese, of the alpine rescue squad in Calabria, said floodwater­s were eight feet deep.

“The wave of flooding of the Raganello stream happens often in the winter, but it has never happened in the summer, when the stream is very popular among tourists,” Franzese told the news agency ANSA.

The gorge on the eastern side of the Pollino National Park boasts aquatic trekking along the stream that cuts through the massive rock, where hikers pass by water falls, water tubs and natural slipways, according to a website. The gorge is broken down into three sections, the upper, middle and lower canyons, with hikes averaging between 2 and 3 hours and varying in difficult.

Guides include spelunkers and rescue instructor­s, who supply helmets, wet suits and other equipment.

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