A powerful earthquake struck central Italy as residents slept on Monday morning, killing more than 90 people and making up to 50 000 homeless.
”Some towns in the area have been virtually destroyed in their entirety,” a sombre Gianfranco Fini, speaker of the lower house of Parliament, said before the chamber observed a moment of silence.
The Italian news agency Ansa, quoting rescue workers, said the death toll had reached 92 nearly 12 hours after the quake struck.
Most of the dead were in L’Aquila, a 13th-century mountain city about 100km east of Rome, and surrounding towns and villages in the Abruzzo region.
Houses, historic churches and other buildings were demolished in the worst quake to hit Italy in nearly 30 years. Hundreds of people were injured and some 15Â 000 buildings declared off limits.
”I woke up hearing what sounded like a bomb,” said Angela Palumbo (87) as she walked on a street in L’Aquila.
”We managed to escape with things falling all around us. Everything was shaking, furniture falling. I don’t remember ever seeing anything like this in my life,” she said.
Interior Minister Roberto Maroni visited the area and said the death toll had surpassed 50.
Luca Spoletini, a Civil Protection Department spokesman, said the quake may have made up to 50Â 000 people homeless. About 26 cities and towns were seriously damaged.
In the small town of Onna alone, 10 people were killed, said a Reuters photographer who saw a mother and her infant daughter carried away in the same coffin. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi cancelled a trip to Moscow and declared a national emergency, which would free up funds for aid and rebuilding. Pope Benedict said he was saying a special prayer for the victims.
Older houses and buildings made of stone, particularly in outlying villages that have not seen much restoration, collapsed like straw houses.
Hospitals appealed for help from doctors and nurses throughout Italy. The stench of gas filled some parts of the mountain towns and villages as mains ruptured.
Residents of Rome, which is rarely hit by seismic activity, were woken by the quake, which rattled furniture and swayed lights in most of central Italy. It struck shortly after 3.30am and registered between 5,8 and 6,3 magnitude.
”My father is surely dead”
”When the quake hit, I rushed out to my father’s house and opened the main door and everything had collapsed. My father is surely dead. I called for help but no one was around,” said Camillo Berardi in L’Aquila.
Rubble was strewn throughout the city of 68Â 000 people and nearby towns, blocking roads and hampering rescue teams. Old women wailed and residents armed with nothing but bare hands helped firefighters and rescue workers tear through the rubble
”Thousands of buildings collapsed or were damaged,” said Agostino Miozzo, a Civil Protection official.
A resident in L’Aquila standing by an apartment block that had been reduced to the height of an adult said: ”This building was four storeys high.”
Some cars were buried by the rubble.
In another part of the city, residents tried to hush the wailing of grief to try to pinpoint the sound of a crying baby.
There were numerous reports of some of the area’s centuries-old Romanesque and Renaissance churches collapsing.
Part of a university residence and a hotel collapsed in L’Aquila and at least one person was still trapped.
The quake brought down the bell tower of a church in the centre of L’Aquila. Bridges and highways in the mountainous area were closed as a precaution.
Weeks before the disaster, an Italian scientist had predicted a major quake around L’Aquila, based on concentrations of radon gas around seismically active areas.
Seismologist Gioacchino Giuliani was reported to police for ”spreading alarm” and was forced to remove his findings from the Internet. Italy’s Civil Protection Agency reassured locals at the end of March that tremors being felt were ”absolutely normal” for a seismic area.
The quake was the latest and strongest in a series to hit the L’Aquila area on Sunday and Monday. Earthquakes can be particularly dangerous in parts of Italy because so many buildings are centuries-old. About 2Â 700 people died in an earthquake in the south in 1980. — Reuters