When Silvio Berlusconi asked to ‘fondle’ women councillor at earthquake site

London, May 7 (ANI): Gaff-prone Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is once again in the news for making suggestive remarks to a female councillor while touring an earthquake-hit region.

Lia Giovanzzi Beltrami, 41, has confirmed that the 72-year-old premier made the remark in the Abruzzo region.

According to the Sun, Berlusconi asked Beltrami: “Can I fondle you?”

A video showing the incident has been posted on a newspaper website.

The footage shows the PM making the comment as he puts his arm around Beltrami.

Beltrami said: “I was left annoyed by what he said.”

Berlusconi’s wife, 52, has said that she wants a divorce from him because she is tired of seeing him with younger women.

Almost 297 died and thousands were left homeless in Abruzzo. (ANI)

Pope Benedict XVI spends 82nd birthday resting

Castel Gandolfo, Italy – Following a week of intense Easter festivities, Pope Benedict XVI was set Thursday to spend his 82nd birthday resting at the papal residence of Castel Gandolfo in the hills south of Rome.

The low-key commemoration contrasted with April 16, 2008 when Benedict, who was on an apostolic visit to the US, was feted in Washington by then US president George W Bush.

On that occasion a choir sang “Happy Birthday” for the pontiff on the White House lawn.

In March this year Benedict made his first trip to Africa as pontiff when he visited Cameroon and Angola, while his next trip abroad is scheduled in May when he will travel to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

Before then, he is expected to visit Italy’s central Abruzzo region which last week was struck by a devastating earthquake in which almost 300 people were killed.

Unlike many other monarchies, Vatican City state does not officially celebrate birthdays of popes but holds public holidays to mark the anniversary of their election.

Benedict who took that name following his election on April 19, 2005, was born as Joseph Ratzinger in the town of Marktl am Inn, Bavaria, Germany.(dpa)

EU official: 500 million euros in EU aid for Italy earthquake

Rome – Some half-a-billion euros (665 million dollars) in European Union funds could be made available to help reconstruction efforts in Italy following last week’s devastating earthquake, a top EU official said Wednesday.

European Commission Vice President Antonio Tajani said the Italian government had 10 weeks by which it would have to apply for the money.

Almost 300 people were killed and around 35,000 left homeless in the earthquake which struck the central Abruzzo region on April 6.

Italy would be able to tap into a “solidarity fund” made available to the EU’s 27 member nations in the event of natural disasters, Tajani said in an interview with private television station Canale 5.

“Moreover some structural funds destined for Abruzzo and Italy can be re-allocated, and thus I think without exaggerating that a sum of 500 million euros can be reached,” Tajani said.

The Italian government estimates that some 12 billion euros are needed to reconstruct housing and other buildings in areas badly damaged by the earthquake, including L’Aquila a city of around 72,000 inhabitants.

Recent low temperatures and rain have made life even more uncomfortable for thousands of people who have been staying in tent shelters since abandoning their damaged homes. (dpa)

Italy earthquake toll at 294 as rescue efforts end

L’Aquila, Italy – Almost a week after a devastating earthquake hit central Italy, authorities on Sunday terminated the search for survivors with the death toll standing at 294. A
59-year-old man who died in hospital late Saturday was the latest victim of the earthquake that struck the Abruzzo region on Monday.

By Sunday morning all missing people were accounted for, but officials said they could not exclude the possibility of more being found under rubble in the city of L’Aquila and other badly damaged towns.

A 20-year-old woman rescued on Wednesday was the last person to be pulled alive from wreckage.

On Sunday, with Easter being celebrated in many parts of the world including Italy, thousands of people made homeless by the quake attended mass services at makeshift chapels erected at several tent camp shelters.

“It’s Easter for us too, despite the tragedy and the rubble of the earthquake,” L’Aquila Archbishop Giuseppe Molinari told hundreds of faithful gathered for mass under a plastic tent at the main homeless camp outside the devastated city center.

“The resurrection of Christ is also the resurrection of L’Aquila,” he said.

The camps are providing shelter for some 17,000 people, most of whom abandoned their homes shortly after the earthquake which registered a magnitude of 6.2, struck in the early hours of Monday.

Prosecutors say they are investigating why so many modern buildings were flattened by the earthquake, amid allegations that safe construction procedures were ignored in an area known for its high seismic risk.

Italy quake survivors celebrate bitter Easter

L’AQUILA, Italy (Reuters) – Thousands of people made homeless by Italy’s deadliest earthquake in 30 years celebrated a somber Easter on Sunday, huddling for mass at makeshift chapels set up in tent cities and emergency shelters.

Six days after disaster struck the central city of L’Aquila and 26 surrounding towns, killing 294 people, survivors prayed for the dead and sought comfort in religion to help them rebuild shattered lives.

“It’s Easter for us too, despite the tragedy and the rubble of the earthquake,” L’Aquila archbishop Giuseppe Molinari told hundreds of faithful gathered for mass under a plastic tent at the main homeless camp outside the devastated city center.

“The resurrection of Christ is also the resurrection of L’Aquila,” he said as people struggled to hold back tears.

Some 40,000 people lost their homes in the 6.3 magnitude quake, which hit the Abruzzo region in the early hours of Monday, catching residents in their sleep.

L’Aquila, a medieval city of 68,000, bore the brunt of the disaster and many of its buildings and centuries-old churches crumbled to the ground.

Rescue efforts virtually ended when exhausted firemen stopped searching for a possible survivor in a collapsed four-storey building on Saturday evening and said all missing people had been accounted for.

Hundreds of aftershocks have shaken the area since the quake, hampering rescue operations and terrifying residents.

EGGS FOR THE CHILDREN

In his Easter message, Pope Benedict urged survivors not to lose hope. He plans to visit the stricken zone soon.

In the 32 tent cities hosting some 18,000 homeless, priests offered communion wafers at makeshift altars and aid workers distributed brightly wrapped chocolate Easter eggs to cheer up children and their distraught families.

“Today my heart is heavy as I think about all these dead people but we must not give up hope,” said Anna Lucantonio, 65, clutching a rosary in a canvas-chapel at the main L’Aquila camp.

“This rosary, a statue of the Virgin Mary and sacred water I got from my pilgrimage to Lourdes is all I took with me as the house crumbled around us. I thought that was all I really needed,” she said.

Outside the tent, children played football and the bells of a surviving church could be heard in the background.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who has vowed to rebuild L’Aquila in 28 months and promised his government would not abandon the people of Abruzzo, attended mass at a police academy where a state funeral for the dead was held on Friday.

“We’ll do everything possible to get people out of the tents in the shortest possible time and give them a comfortable accommodation,” he said on Sunday.

But in the camps, the mood was grim.

“For how long do we have to stay here? It’s horrible when you can’t go back home,” said 86-year old Lidia Placidi, sitting outside her blue tent with two dogs her family managed to rescue.

Annachiara Gaudieri, another woman sheltering at the L’Aquila tent city, said she could not bear to go back to live in her house, even if it was possible to repair it.

“L’Aquila was known for its ancient churches and for being a university city. Now the churches have gone, and so many students were killed. There were 20,000 of them here, and those who survived have all left. It will never be the same.”

Prosecutors are investigating why so many modern buildings were flattened by the quake and whether flawed construction materials were to blame for the high death toll in an area known for its seismic risk.

(Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Pope Benedict XVI leads Easter vigil

Vatican City – Pope Benedict XVI led the traditional Easter vigil late Saturday, entering a darkened St Peter’s Basilica while carrying a tall candle – a gesture symbolizing the Christian belief in the resurrected Jesus’ illuminating presence in the world. Taking their cue from the 81-year-old pontiff, thousands of faithful gathered inside lit their own candles, the flames flickering inside the church’s immense interior.

Outside, on a mild, spring night in Rome, tens of thousands more followed the ceremony from four giant screens erected on St Peter’s Square.

During the ceremony Benedict also administered the sacraments of baptism, confirmation and first communion to five converts – three women and two men – including nationals from China, Italy and the US.

In his homily Benedict said that through Jesus’ resurrection mankind can hope for eternal life, but that this is something that can only be achieved by first experiencing death.

“The Easter candle burns, and is thereby consumed: Cross and resurrection are inseperable,” the pontiff said referring to Jesus’ crucifixion.

“From the cross, from the son’s self-giving, light is born, true radiance comes into the world,” Benedict said.

This year’s Easter festivities in Italy have been tinged with sorrow for the victims of a devastating earthquake that struck the country’s central Abruzzo region on Monday.

By Saturday the death toll stood at 291, including at least 20 children.

During a Friday evening Way-of-the-Cross procession over which he presided, Benedict renewed his condolences for the dead, offering prayers that their souls may rest in peace.

Earlier in the week, the German-born pontiff said he planned to visit the region hit by the tremor “as soon as possible.”

Some 17,000 people evacuated from L’Aquila and other badly damaged towns have spent their nights in several tent shelters set up by authorities.

Benedict has donated 500 chocolate Easter eggs to be distributed to children staying in the tent shelters, the Vatican said.

Benedict is scheduled to celebrate Easter Mass on Sunday in St Peter’s Square. He will also impart his traditional Urbi et Orbi “to the city and to the world” blessing and message. (dpa)

Hopes dim in Italian search for quake survivor

Search for possible survivor of Monday’s quake

* Rescue efforts winding down

* Death toll rises to 291; around 40,000 homeless

By Silvia Aloisi

L’AQUILA, Italy, April 11 (Reuters) – Rescue workers searched on Saturday for what could be the last survivor of Italy’s devastating earthquake but said there was no guarantee anyone was left alive under the rubble.

A day after Italians held a state funeral for the victims of Monday’s quake, the death toll rose to 291 after more bodies were pulled from the debris. Nearly 40,000 people were made homeless.

Sniffer dogs picked up a human scent late on Friday coming from beneath the ruins of what was a four-storey building in L’Aquila, the medieval mountain city hardest hit by the 6.3 magnitude quake. Rescue workers also heard noises.

But it went quiet overnight and officials say dogs could have responded to the scent of a corpse, or even just human blood. At least nine bodies have already been pulled from that site, firemen said.

“We dug all night and now we just have to wait. We can hear almost nothing now,” a rescue worker told Reuters.

Still, on the sixth day after the quake, hopes are fading of finding people alive. The latest survivor to be rescued, a 20-year-old woman, was pulled from the rubble on Tuesday.

The Civil Protection Agency has signalled that the search is almost over and many officials expect the agency to wind up rescue operations on Sunday. Violent aftershocks continued to shake the Abruzzo region overnight and into the morning, further terrifying survivors, many of whom prepared to celebrate Easter homeless.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi estimated that almost 24,000 of the homeless were living in emergency camps and 15,000 had been given shelter in hotels or private homes.

Berlusconi, a billionaire media mogul, has offered to put up the homeless at three of his own properties.

“I will do what I can too, by offering some of my houses,” said the 72-year-old prime minister, Italy’s second richest man. Attention is now starting to turn to the reconstruction of a region that relies on tourism, farming and family firms. More than half the companies in the Abruzzo region are out of action.

One estimate put the damage at up to 3 billion euros ($4 billion), but its impact on Italy’s economy, which is worth nearly 2 trillion euros a year and is already mired in recession, is expected to be limited.

The government has also announced an inquiry after President Giorgio Napolitano said shoddy construction may be behind the collapse of modern buildings that should have been quake-proof. (Writing by Phil Stewart)

Search for Italian earthquake victims continues

Rome – Rescue teams in Italy’s central Abruzzo region continued to sift through the rubble Saturday, six days after an earthquake that left at least 290 dead. Volunteer rescue workers using a special microphone had on Friday night scoured the rubble of a house in the city of L’Aquila, where noises had been heard. There was however little hope of anyone being found alive, according to Italian media reports.

The quake that registered some 6.2 on the Richter scale struck on Monday, destroying scores of buildings in L’Aquila and other nearby towns in the Abruzzo region.

A state funeral for many of the victims of the deadliest quake to hit Italy in almost three decades took place on Friday.

Efforts to find survivors were due to continue through Sunday.

Berlusconi offers own homes to quake survivors

L’AQUILA, Italy (Reuters) – Italy’s billionaire prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, Friday offered to put up in his own homes some of the thousands of people made homeless by this week’s earthquake.

“I will do what I can too, by offering some of my houses,” the 72-year-old media mogul told reporters after a state funeral for the victims in the mountain city of L’Aquila.

About 17,000 survivors are living in tents in L’Aquila and other towns in the central Abruzzo region, which was hit by the 6.3 magnitude quake Monday. Thousands more are being put up in hotels or have found refuge with family.

Berlusconi’s private homes include a mansion in Arcore near Milan, beach villas in Sardinia and Portofino on the Riviera, another on Lake Maggiore, an apartment in central Rome and many more. Forbes magazine rates him as Italy’s second richest man.

(Reporting by Silvia Aloisi; writing by Stephen Brown)

After Italy’s quake, Pope reflects on disasters

ROME (Reuters) – Pope Benedict reflected on the tragedies and disasters that test faith during a Good Friday procession in Rome, just hours after Italians buried victims of the country’s devastating earthquake.

The pontiff offered a special prayer for survivors of Monday’s quake, asking that they find hope, despite a disaster that killed at least 289 people and left almost 40,000 homeless.

“We pray that even for them, on this dark night, a star of hope appears, the light of the risen Lord,” said the pope, who soon plans to visit the disaster zone in the Abruzzo region.

He was presiding over the traditional Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession around Rome’s Colosseum, commemorating Christ’s crucifixion and death.

Attended by tens of thousands of people, the solemn, night-time ceremony is one of the main services before Easter, the climax of the Christian year.

In this year’s ceremony, the pope listened to meditations that began by urging the faithful not to lose faith in trying times. They were written by Indian Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil.

“When misfortune hits us close to home, we grow disheartened. When we fall direct victims of a disaster, our self-confidence is totally shaken and our faith is put to the test. But all is not lost yet,” Menamparampil wrote.

Although composed before the disaster, the mediations took on special significance for a country grappling with its most deadly earthquake in three decades.

“Tragedies make us ponder. A tsunami tells us that life is serious. Hiroshima and Nagasaki remain pilgrim places,” Menamparampil wrote in one of the meditations.

“When death strikes near, another world draws close. We then shed our illusions and have a grasp of the deeper reality.”

Flags in Italy flew at half-mast on a national day of mourning Friday, shops closed their shutters and airports halted take-offs, observing a minute’s silence.

Pope Benedict granted a special dispensation to allow a funeral for quake victims to be held earlier in the day in the mountain city of L’Aquila, the worst hit by the quake. Mass is not usually celebrated on Good Friday.

The meditations also lamented all forms of violence, corruption, oppression and what Menamparampil said was an erosion of the public expression of religious life.

Menamparampil, archbishop of Guwahati in northeast India, wrote: “Jesus continues to suffer when believers are persecuted.”

The German-born pope is leading the 1.1 billion-member Roman Catholic Church toward the fourth Easter of his pontificate.

Saturday, Benedict will say an Easter Eve mass and on Sunday will deliver an “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and the world) blessing and message.

(Editing by Richard Balmforth)

Good Friday procession in Rome to focus on India

Rome, April 10 (DPA) Pope Benedict XVI planned to preside over Rome’s traditional Good Friday evening Way of the Cross procession at which the Vatican has invited the faithful to reflect on the persecution of Christians in India.

The procession was to be accompanied by words penned by Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil of Guwahati, India.

As in many previous years, the event which commemorates Jesus’ last hours leading to his crucifixion was set to be held at Rome’s Colosseum.

Prayers were also expected to refer to the grief that has gripped Italy this week following a devastating earthquake in the country’s central Abruzzo region.

On Friday, the toll from Monday’s earthquake stood at 287.

A message from Pope Benedict was read out at a state funeral for victims held Friday morning in the city of L’Aquila.

The 81-year-old pontiff is also scheduled to lead an Easter vigil at the Vatican Saturday.

On Easter Sunday, he is due to celebrate Mass in St Peter’s before delivering his Urbi et Orbi message and blessing ‘to the city and the world.’

Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ and is regarded by Christians as their most important religious feast.

Indian theme for Good Friday procession in Rome

Rome – Pope Benedict XVI planned to preside over Rome’s traditional Good Friday evening Way of the Cross procession at which the Vatican has invited the faithful to reflect on the persecution of Christians in IndiaThe procession was to be accompanied by words penned by Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil of Guwahati, India.

As in many previous years, the event which commemorates the last hours leading to Jesus’ crucifixion was set to be held at Rome’s Colosseum.

Prayers were also expected to refer to the grief that has gripped Italy this week following a devastating earthquake in the country’s central Abruzzo region.

On Friday, the death toll from Monday’s earthquake stood at 287.

A message from Benedict was read out at a state funeral for victims held Friday morning in the city of L’Aquila.

The 81-year-old pontiff is also scheduled to lead an Easter vigil at the Vatican on Saturday.

On Easter Sunday, he is due to celebrate Mass in St Peter’s before delivering his Urbi et Orbi message and blessing “to the city and the world.”

Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ and is regarded by Christians as their most important religious feast.(dpa)

Easter rituals begin in Rome amid grief for earthquake victims

Vatican City – Pope Benedict XVI in a Holy Thursday Chrism Mass celebrated the first of a series of traditional rituals leading to Easter – a feast tinged with sorrow in Italy this year for the victims of an devastating earthquake.

During the ceremony in St Peter’s Basilica, Benedict blessed holy oils which will be used in Catholic sacraments, including baptisms, confirmations and last rites for the dying.

Some of the oils consecrated this year are destined for parishes in Italy’s central Abruzzo region where by Thursday morning the death toll from Monday’s earthquake stood at 278.

Benedict on Wednesday said he plans to visit the earthquake area “as soon as possible”.

On Thursday evening, the 81-year-old pontiff was scheduled to perform the traditional foot-washing ceremony which commemorates the same gesture carried out by Jesus Christ before his Last Supper.

Benedict is scheduled to preside over the traditional Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession in Rome’s Colosseum on Good Friday and an Easter vigil at the Vatican on Saturday.

On Easter Sunday, he is due to celebrate Mass in St Peter’s before delivering his Urbi et Orbi message and blessing “to the city and the world.”

Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ and is regarded by Christians as their most important religious feast. dpa

2ND ROUNDUP: Italy extends earthquake rescue efforts into Easter

Rome – Efforts to find survivors of the earthquake that struck central Italy on Monday will continue through Sunday – three days beyond a previous limit announced by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said Wednesday.

“The search to find survivors under the rubble will continue incessantly until Easter (Sunday),” Maroni said during a visit to an operating centre in Rome that is coordinating the rescue work.

By Wednesday evening, the death toll from the temblor which destroyed scores of buildings in the city of L’Aquila and other nearby towns in the Abruzzo region stood at 272.

Rescuers, often with just their bare hands, continued sifting through smashed masonry and other debris in the hilly terrain.

The task is being made even more dangerous by dozens of powerful aftershocks that have followed the main earthquake. Monday’s tremor registered around 6.2 on the Richter scale.

But late on Tuesday night, rescuers’ efforts received a boost when they extracted alive Eleonora Calesini, a 20-year-old student from a Rimini who was trapped in a collapsed five-story modern apartment building for over 40 hours.

Calesini, who was found still wearing her pyjamas, was lifted by helicopter to a hospital.

Elsewhere in L’Aquila there were grim reminders of those who were not quite so lucky, including 11 corpses that have yet to be identified.

Authorities asked people with missing relatives of friends to gather at a makeshift mortuary located near a shopping mall to see if they could recognize loved ones among the dead.

A proposal by the city’s archbishop to hold a state funeral for the victims on Friday was being considered authorities.

Following rainstorms that fell as tents were still being erected by authorities late Monday, people who abandoned their homes in the wake of the tremor suffered further discomfort Tuesday night as temperatures dipped to below 5 degrees Celsius.

By Wednesday morning, some 2,000 tents were housing 17,000 people, most of whom relocated from L’Aquila’s city centre and neighbouring towns, including Onna and Paganica, all of which were severely damaged by the earthquake.

Another 3,000 people were staying at several hotels in other towns of the Abruzzo region, considered safe from the aftershocks which have caused more buildings to crumble in the worst hit areas.

“The people of L’Aquila are showing great dignity,” the city’s Mayor Massimo Cialente said speaking at an athletics field where dozens of tents have been erected.

Cialente said he has requested the Education Ministry to send large container to the city to serve as temporary classrooms for the city’s children.

Some 1,000 people were injured in the earthquake with some 500 receiving treatment in hospitals situated in various parts of the Abruzzo region after L’Aquila’s main hospital, which suffered severe structural damage, was evacuated on Monday.

The government says that reconstruction costs will rise to 1.2 billion euros (1.6 billion dollars) and entire towns will have to be rebuilt. Monday’s earthquake was the deadliest to hit Italy in almost 30 years.

In 1980 up to 3,000 people are estimated to have died in an earthquake in the souther Campania and Basilicata regions. (dpa)

EXTRA: Death toll rises to 272 in Italian earthquake

Rome – The death toll after the Italian earthquake rose with the recovery of another 22 bodies, to 272, by late Wednesday, according to Italian rescue officials.

The new figure was released after the Italian government announced it would extend rescue efforts through Sunday, three days beyond a previous limit set by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Monday’s temblor destroyed scores of buildings in the city of L’Aquila and other nearby towns in the country’s central Abruzzo region and left an estimated 20,000 people homeless.

It’s not clear how many people were still missing in the disaster, which left 1,000 people wounded, many of them with serious injuries. (dpa)

Italy quake toll rises to 250

L’Aquila (Italy), April 8 (DPA) Following a night of cold and further misery in central Italy the death count since Monday’s earthquake has risen to 250, authorities said Wednesday.

Officials said the death toll could rise as workers continued to find people buried under buildings which collapsed during the earthquake that registered between 5.8 and 6.2 on the Richter scale.

Strong aftershocks continued to shake the region, making rescue operations difficult.

Eleven of the bodies pulled from the rubble remain unidentified.

Authorities have asked relatives and friends of missing people to gather at a makeshift mortuary located near a shopping mall in the city of L’Aquila to see if they could identify the loved ones among the dead.

Authorities said they were considering a proposal by the city’s archbishop to hold a state funeral for the victims Friday.

People who abandoned their homes in the wake of the tremor suffered further discomfort Tuesday night as temperatures dipped to below five degrees Celsius.

By Wednesday morning, some 2,000 tents were housing 17,000 people, most of whom relocated from L’Aquila’s city centre and neighbouring towns, including Onna and Paganica, all of which were severely damaged by the earthquake.

Another 3,000 people were staying at hotels in other towns of the Abruzzo region, considered safe from the aftershocks which have caused more buildings to crumble in the worst hit areas.

Police also evacuated the 140 inmates held at a prison in L’Aquila overnight.

Among those transferred to other prisons were several high security detainees serving life sentences, including convicted murderers such as mafia boss Salvatore Madonia and Red Brigades terrorist Nadia Desdemona Lioce, the ANSA news agency reported.

Architectural treasures damaged in Italian earthquake

Rome, April 7 (DPA) While public attention in Italy continued to focus Tuesday on the human toll of the earthquake that struck the central Abruzzo region, details of widespread damage to many historical buildings has also began to emerge.

In Abruzzo’s regional capital L’Aquila, originally built in the Middle Ages as a mountain stronghold, it were mostly modern buildings that were flattened when the main shock struck the city early Monday morning.

Experts noted that had the earthquake occurred hours before, people attending Palm Sunday Mass at L’Aquila’s Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio would have been in grave danger.

The earthquake caused the collapse of the roof over the central transept area of the medieval church, widely considered a masterpiece of Romanesque and Gothic architecture.

At another church, the 16th century San Bernardino, the belltower crumbled. Stones also tumbled from the city’s main cathedral, which was rebuilt after a 1703 earthquake.

Boasting several gems representing changing archaeological styles through the ages, L’Aquila also saw the destruction of the dome of the Anime Sante church, designed by the famed Neoclassical architect Giuseppe Valadier.

The dome of another church, the Baroque-style Sant’ Agostino, toppled down onto an adjacent building housing the city’s main government offices.

Surrounding towns, also suffered losses to their architectural heritage.

Among these, a tiny medieval mountain hamlet voted Italy’s prettiest in a recent poll, San Stefano di Sessanio, lost its landmark watchtower.

The earthquake’s main shock was also felt as far way as Rome, some 100 km from the epicentre, initially raising fears of possible damage to the Terme di Caracalla, located near the ancient capital’s centre.

But officials denied reports that fresh cracks had emerged on the walls of of the Terme, the famed thermal baths built by the Emperor Caracalla.

Berlusconi says Italy’s quake victims should see calamity as ‘camping trip’

L’Aquila (Italy), Apr.8 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has advised traumatised earthquake survivors to view living in emergency tent accommodation as like being on a “camping weekend”.
His statement is unlikely to go down well with an estimated 17,000 people who have been made homeless by the powerful earthquake which struck the Abruzzo region of central Italy on Monday, with many of them enduring freezing temperatures in tent cities put up by the army, reports The Telegraph.

There are still not enough tents to accommodate all the homeless and some people have spent the last two nights sleeping in their cars, struggling to stay warm in an upland area which is surrounded by snow-capped mountains.

Berlusconi appeared to dismiss the discomfort, telling German television station N-TV: “They have everything they need, they have medical care, hot food… Of course, their current lodgings are a bit temporary. But they should see it like a weekend of camping.”

Berlusconi made the remarks while touring some of the tented encampments that have sprung up around the city of L’Aquila, which was severely damaged by the quake.

His breezy assurance that the homeless had all they need was in stark contrast to the experience of many survivors.

As the death toll from Italy’s devastating earthquake passed 250, more than 200 people were last night unable to find shelter at camps because tents were already packed with people.

“Shame on you!” screamed a woman at one of the tent cities.

The Italian government estimates that at least 1.3 billion euros will be needed to repair or rebuild the 10,000 buildings damaged in the quake. (ANI)

4TH ROUNDUP: Central Italy reels as quake claims more than 150 lives

L’Aquila, Italy – The death toll from the heavy earthquake that struck central Italy early Monday had gone beyond 150, far higher than the last previous accounts, the Ansa news agency reported.

The temblor struck the ancient town of L’Aquila and the surrounding mountainous areas about 100 kilometres north-east of Rome in the early hours of Monday.

The agency cited hospitals in the quake-struck region north-east of the capital Rome in reporting the figure, which was well up on the previous toll of at least 90 people killed.

The latest account also said that some 1,500 people had been injured and 70,000 people rendered homeless, also higher figures than reported earlier.

An estimated 50,000 people were homeless, torn from their sleep and wandering the street, according to civil defence officials.

Many more dead were feared under rubble after thousands of homes were wrecked or left dangerously cracked.

The Italian government declared a state of emergency and set up a major operation sending in troops and emergency services to an area largely cut off after access roads were left blocked.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni told reporters that emergency services “could not have been quicker” in getting to the region. “They were on their way just a quarter of an hour after the quake struck,” he said.

Local media said many more bodies were expected to be unearthed after the quake – revised reports put its Richter scale strength at 6.2 – in central Italy’s Abruzzo region.

The regional capital L’Aquila and the ancient town of Castelnuovo were especially badly hit, as were the nearby towns of Paganmica and Poggio Picenze.

Four children were reported among the dead in one L’Aquila hospital. Buildings there that collapsed included a student dormitory in the historic centre, plus a four-storey building where up to 20 people were feared trapped.

The quake, preceded by two strong tremors and followed by an aftershock of 4.7 strength, occurred at 3.32 am from a depth of some five kilometres, according to civil defence authorities.

Tremors were clearly felt in Rome and as far afield as Naples. It was among the worst quakes to hit Italy in several decades.

“The house just collapsed on top of me,” said one survivor, Vittorio Perfetto, who was able to put his experiences onto the internet.

Another survivor, 23-year-old Guido Mariani, described how he spent a terrifying three hours buried under rubble until rescuers were able to reach him.

There were reports of hospitals in the region overflowing with injured and cars and other vehicles kept pouring in from immediate and outlying areas ferrying people with major and minor injuries.

Shocked survivors wandered streets huddled in blankets to ward off the early morning chill, with L’Aquila reduced to a ghostly quiet. The dome of a central church caved in while the city’s cathedral was also damaged.

The US Geological Survey, which tracks earthquakes worldwide, reported the strength of the quake at 6.3, saying it was centred 95 kilometres north-east of Rome at a depth of 10 kilometres.

A magnitude-4.7 aftershock was reported shortly after the quake, which was preceded by two tremors with magnitudes of 3.5 and 3.9, Italian authorities said.

It was the strongest Italian quake since 1980, when a quake in the south killed 2,570 people.

A section of the highway from L’Aquila to Rome was closed, and electrical and telephone service was cut off in many areas.

By Monday afternoon, local officials had begun trading blame as to whether enough credence had been given to a series of tremors in recent days. Others pointed out that many of the buildings in the region did not meet earthquake safety guidelines.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi cancelled a planned visit to Moscow as he declared the state of emergency. “Let’s leave the politics to one side,” he said. “We must help those who need help.”

Italy quake toll goes past 90

Rome, April 6 (DPA) The death toll in the devastating earthquake in central Italy has gone beyond 90, the Italian news agency ANSA reported, citing rescue workers.

Earlier reports said at least 50 people were confirmed dead – amid fears of that number rising – after a central Italian mountain area around the ancient town of L’Aquila was rocked by a major earthquake that struck early Monday. The figure was confirmed by Interior Minister Roberto Maroni while talking to reporters in L’Aquila.

An estimated 50,000 people were homeless, according to civil defence officials.

Many more were feared dead, buried under rubble after thousands of homes were wrecked or left dangerously cracked. Thousands of people were torn from their sleep and left homeless, wandering the streets.

The Italian government declared a state of emergency and set up a major operation sending in troops and emergency services to an area largely cut off after access roads were left blocked.

Maroni told reporters that emergency services ‘could not have been quicker’ in getting to the region. ‘They were on their way just a quarter of an hour after the quake struck,’ he said.

Local media said many more bodies were expected to be unearthed after the quake – revised reports put its Richter scale strength at 6.2 – in central Italy’s Abruzzo region.

The regional capital L’Aquila and the ancient town of Castelnuovo were badly hit, as were the nearby towns of Paganmica and Poggio Picenze.

The quake, preceded by two strong tremors and followed by an aftershock of 4.7 strength, occurred at 3.32 a.m. from a depth of some five kilometres, according to civil defence authorities.

Tremors were clearly felt in Rome about 144 km to the southwest, and as far as Naples. It was among the worst quakes to hit Italy in several decades, local reports said.

‘The house just collapsed on top of me,’ said one survivor, Vittorio Perfetto, who was able to put his experiences onto the internet.

Another survivor, 23-year-old Guido Mariani, described how he spent a terrifying three hours buried under rubble until rescuers were able to reach him.

There were reports of hospitals in the region overflowing with injured and cars and other vehicles kept pouring in from immediate and outlying areas ferrying people with major and minor injuries.

Shocked survivors wandered streets huddled in blankets to ward off the early morning chill, with L’Aquila reduced to a ghostly quiet. The dome of a central church caved in while the city’s cathedral was also damaged.

The US Geological Survey reported the strength of the quake at 6.3, saying it was centred 95 km northeast of Rome at a depth of 10 km.

A magnitude-4.7 aftershock was reported shortly after the quake, which was preceded by two tremors with magnitudes of 3.5 and 3.9, Italian authorities said.

A section of the highway from L’Aquila to Rome was closed, and electrical and telephone service was cut off in many areas.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi cancelled a planned visit to Moscow as he declared the state of emergency. ‘Let’s leave the politics to one side,’ he said. ‘We must help those who need help.’