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120 dead scores missing

ACCUMOLI (ITALY): A powerful earthquake rattled a remote area of central Italy today, leaving at least 120 persons dead and scenes of carnage in mountain villages.

120 dead scores missing

A man carries a pram among damaged buildings after a strong heartquake hit Amatrice town in central Italy on Wednesday. AFP



Accumoli (Italy), August 24 

A powerful earthquake rattled a remote area of central Italy today, leaving at least 120 persons dead and scenes of carnage in mountain villages.

With 368 persons injured and an unknown number trapped under rubble, the figure of dead and wounded was expected to rise in the wake of the pre-dawn quake, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi warned. “This is not a final toll,” he said.

Hundreds of people were to spend a chilly night in hastily-assembled tents with the risk of aftershocks making it far too risky for them to return home.

Scores of buildings were reduced to dusty piles of masonry in communities close to the epicentre of the quake, which had a magnitude of between 6.0 and 6.2.

It hit a remote area straddling Umbria, Marche and Lazio at a time of year when second home owners and other visitors swell the numbers staying there. Many of the victims were from Rome.

The devastated area is just north of L'Aquila, the city where some 300 people died in another quake in 2009.

More than half of the deaths occurred in and around the villages of Amatrice, Accumoli and Arquata del Tronto.

Guido Bordo, 69, lost his sister and her husband after they were trapped inside their holiday house in the hamlet of Illica, near Accumoli. “There's no sound from them, we only heard their cats,” he told AFP before the deaths were confirmed.

Sergio Camosi escaped in his underwear with his wife and daughter just before his house caved in. “We ran down the stairs but the door was blocked by stones so we had to climb out the window,” he said tearfully.

Among the victims was a nine-month-old baby girl whose parents survived, an 18-month-old toddler and two other young children who died with their parents in Accumoli.

It was Italy’s most powerful earthquake since the 2009 disaster in L'Aquila. “Half the village has disappeared," said Amatrice mayor Sergio Pirozzi, surveying a town centre that looked as if had been subjected to a bombing raid. 

Pope Francis interrupted his weekly audience in St Peter's Square to express his shock. “To hear the mayor of Amatrice say his village no longer exists and knowing that there are children among the victims, is very upsetting for me,” he said.

Civil Protection chief Fabrizio Curcio classed the quake as ‘severe’. The shocks were strong enough to be felt 150 km away in Rome, where authorities ordered structural tests on the Colosseum.

Some of the worst damage was suffered in Pescara del Tronto, a hamlet near Arquata in the Marche region where the bodies of the dead were laid out in a children's play park. With residents advised not to go back into their homes, temporary campsites were being established in Amatrice and Accumoli as authorities looked to find emergency accommodation for more than 2,000 people. — AFP

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