The tremors struck an area
northeast of the capital Rome near Amatrice, the town flattened by a 6.0-6.2
quake which killed almost 300 people and injured hundreds more in August.
The
first 5.5 magnitude quake Wednesday sent people out of their residences, likely
saving lives when the second, more destructive, 6.1 magnitude one struck two
hours later. In both cases the epicentre was near the village of Visso in the
central Marche region.
Hundreds of people awoke in
emergency shelters in Italy on Thursday after fleeing their homes following a
series of strong quakes in the same region struck by a devastating tremor two
months ago. After a night of heavy rain, rescuers workers were trying to assess
the full extent of the latest disaster in central Italy, which toppled
buildings and injured dozens.
A series of aftershocks
rattled the area through the night after two quakes with a magnitude of 5.5 and
6.1 struck on Wednesday evening and sent people fleeing their houses in terror.
“Many houses have collapsed. Our town is finished,” Marco Rinaldi, mayor of the
mountain town of Ussita, told Sky Italy television. “The second quake was a
long, terrible one.” One man was reported to have died of a heart attack, and
dozens of people were injured, the authorities said.
“I’ve felt a lot of
earthquakes but that was the strongest I’ve ever felt. Fortunately everyone had
already left their homes after the first quake so I don’t think anyone was
hurt,” Rinaldi said. Several dozen people were treated for light injuries or
shock, civil protection chief Fabrizio Curcio told a news conference, but no
serious injuries had been reported. “Ultimately, the situation is not as
catastrophic as might have been expected” given the strength of the tremors, he
said.
Bad weather – The quakes
were felt in the capital Rome, where residents also ran into the streets. The
second was felt as far away as Venice in the far north, and Naples, south of
the capital. Visso is just 70 kilometres (45 miles) from Visso and also not far
from L’Aquila where a powerful earthquake killed more than 300 in 2009. Italian
television channels broadcast images of collapsed buildings and people standing
dazed in front of their ruined houses. “It is not very easy to make assessments
in the dark and the weather is bad in the whole region. We will have to see
more precisely in the light of day,” said Curcio.
Across the region,
hospitals, a university residence, a retirement home and even a prison had to
be evacuated. “Tonight we’re going to go. But tomorrow I don’t know. The tents,
I can’t go there, it’s too cold,” a resident of Visso said on television. For
people who are unable to return home immediately, civil protection has arranged
accommodation in gyms and prepared to reopen some of the tent camps which were
set up after the August earthquake.
“I want to thank those
working in the rain in the earthquake zones. All of Italy is wrapping its arms
around the communities that have been hit once again,” Prime Minister Matteo
Renzi tweeted. In Rome, the quakes rattled windows and doors. The imposing
foreign ministry headquarters was temporarily evacuated.
A Serie A football match
between Pescara and Atalanta was halted for several minutes when the first
tremor hit. – ‘Like bombs falling’ – The mayor of Serravalle del Chienti,
Gabriele Santamarianova, said the quake felt “like bombs were falling”. “We saw
a cloud of dust, we don’t yet know what has fallen down. We’ll see once the sun
comes up.” Castel Sant’Angelo’s mayor Mauro Falcucci told Sky: “There is no
electricity. There are bound to be house collapses. On top of this there are
torrential rains.”
The little town of some 300
people is near Arquata del Tronto, one of the areas worst hit in the August 24
earthquake. In Ascoli, another town hit hard in August, the mayor said spooked
residents were fleeing by car. Schools here and around the affected region will
not open Thursday to allow officials to carry out safety checks. Italy’s
national geophysics institute said the latest quakes were linked to the August
one, which was followed by thousands of aftershocks, some of them very strong.
“Aftershocks can last for a long time, sometimes for months,” geologist Mario
Tozzi said.
Visso’s mayor Giuliano
Pazzaglini said telephone links in his town had been restored. But television
images showed rubble piled outside a local church. Dozens of aftershocks were
recorded, with the strongest measuring 4.6, according to the Italian national
geophysics institute. In their first editions Thursday morning, several Italian
newspapers headlined “The unending nightmare”. August’s disaster caused an
estimated four billion euros ($4.5 billion) of damage, with 1,400 people still
living in temporary accommodation.
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