Italy earthquake leaves 37 dead, towns in ruins
Story highlights
- Most of the dead are from three villages in a mountainous area
- Rescue workers focus on finding survivors amid the rubble
(CNN)A strong, shallow earthquake hit central Italy early Wednesday, killing at least 37 people and leaving rescuers desperately digging through the rubble to free survivors.
Many
of the dead from the 6.2-magnitude earthquake were from three
badly-affected villages in a mountainous area, according to CNN
affiliate Rai.
The rural area is a popular vacation spot, and is especially bustling with people during the summer break.
The
deaths included 10 people in the village of Pescara del Tronto, six in
Accumoli and five in Amatrice, Rai reported, adding that children were
among the victims.
The earthquake hit 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) southeast of Norcia at 3:36 a.m., and was about 10 kilometers deep, the United States Geological Survey said. Its tremors rattled Rome -- about 100 miles away.
Authorities say they cannot put a figure on the number trapped under the rubble, but the death toll is expected to rise.
Amatrice mayor: 'The town is no more'
Amatrice, a town of about 2,000 people north of Italy's Lazio region, is in ruins.
"The town is no more," Mayor Sergio Pirozzi told the affiliate, appealing to rescuers: "Help us."
Rescue
workers called Amatrice residents' cellphones, and tried to get to
those who answered, the affiliate reported. If there was no answer,
rescuers moved on to the next person.
The
mayor of nearby Accumoli, Stefano Petrucci, described desperate scenes
rescuers raced against time to try to save those beneath the rubble.
"We're digging, digging... hoping to find someone alive," he told the affiliate.
Tommaso
della Longa, a spokesman for the Red Cross, said Amatrice had been
"almost completely destroyed." "The situation is difficult at the
moment."
The priority is to find survivors in the remote, mountainous terrain, he said.
"The
biggest problem at the moment (is) logistic problems because it's in
central Italy, with really small villages. Now the biggest challenge is
to reach all of them," he said.
"During
the holidays there are a lot of people there. So we don't have a
precise number (of how many are affected). We can talk about ten of
thousands, but we don't know the exact number."
Amatrice,
known for its traditional all'amatriciana pasta sauce, had been gearing
up to hold a festival celebrating the recipe this weekend.
'The earth is still moving'
In
the village of Saletta, a tiny settlement of about 20 residents 2
kilometers from Amatrice, CNN contributor Barbie Nadeau saw residents
working to locate their neighbors amid the rubble of a collapsed
two-story home.
Heavy equipment is
yet to reach the isolated village. Locals were improvising with tractors
and farm equipment in an attempt to shift the wreckage from the old
stone homes.
Stunned locals stood
on the roadside still in the pajamas they were wearing when they fled
their houses in the early hours of the morning.
"The earth is still moving, we keep feeling tremor after tremor," she said.
"You've
got people out on the streets, crying, holding onto one another,
holding their children and possessions -- still in their pajamas,"
Nadeau said.
Pope calls for prayers
Pope
Francis called for prayers for those affected by the disaster while
Italian President Sergio Mattarella said "the entire country should
rally with solidarity around the affected populations."
"At
the moment we need to employ all our forces to save human lives, treat
the injured and ensure the best conditions for the people displaced."
The Italian Voluntary Blood Association made an appeal for people to donate blood to help treat those affected.
Italy is no stranger to deadly quakes. In May 2012, a pair of earthquakes killed
dozens of people in northern Italy, while in April 2009, a
6.3-magnitude earthquake hit in the Aquila region of central Italy,
killing 295. The earthquake Wednesday struck an area close to the 2009
earthquake.
'Lasted for at least 30 seconds'.
Eleonora Romendini said she felt the earthquake in Marche region, to the east of the quake's epicenter.
Given
the powerful aftershocks, she was uncertain whether to remain in her
home, but after the third powerful jolt she decided to run outside on to
the street, alongside stunned neighbors.
"It was very shocking," she said. "We were very scared."
Charlotte
Smith, coach of Elon University women's basketball team in North
Carolina, was in Rome with her players when the quake hit.
"It was pretty terrifying," she said.
"It lasted for at least 30 seconds. The entire hotel was shaking."
Source: CNN
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