Sonar scanners find ancient wrecks off Italian coast

(Reuters) – A team of marine archaeologists using sonar scanners have discovered four ancient shipwrecks off the tiny Italian island of Zannone, with intact cargoes of wine and oil.

The remains of the trading vessels, dating from the first century BC to the 5th-7th century AD, are up to 165 meters underwater, a depth that preserved them from being disturbed by fishermen over the centuries.

“The deeper you go, the more likely you are to find complete wrecks,” said Annalisa Zarattini, an official from the archaeological services section of the Italian culture ministry.

The timber structures of the vessels have been eaten away by tiny marine organisms, leaving their outlines and the cargoes still lying in the position they were stowed on board.

“The ships sank, they came to rest at the bottom of the sea, the wood disappeared and you find the whole ship, with the entire cargo. Nothing has been taken away,” she said.

The discoveries were made through cooperation between Italian authorities and the Aurora Trust, a U.S. foundation that promotes exploration of the Mediterranean seabed.

The vessels, up to 18 meters long, had been carrying amphorae, or large jars, containing wine from Italy, and cargo from North Africa and Spain including olive oil, fruit and garum, a pungent fish sauce that was a favorite ingredient in Roman cooking.

Another ship, as yet undated, appeared to have been carrying building bricks. It is unclear how the vessels sank and no human remains have been found.

TRADE ROUTES

The vessels are the second “fleet” of ships to be discovered in recent years near the Pontine islands, an archipelago off Italy’s west coast believed to have been a key junction for ships bringing supplies to the vast warehouses of Rome.

“One aim was to test the hypothesis that the Pontine islands, which are very small and which were barely inhabited in antiquity, were really important maritime staging posts because they had very good natural harbors,” Zarattini said.

The team hope to find a secondary cargo of smaller items which they believe would have been stowed in straw and may be well preserved under the crustacean-clad sediments.

Last year, the project found five wrecks off nearby Ventotene, an island used in Roman times to exile disgraced Roman noblewomen. The Emperor Augustus sent his daughter Julia there to punish her for adultery.

Italy has signed a new UNESCO agreement that requires them to leave the wreckage in place, potentially opening the way to would-be treasure hunters although Zarattini said the benefits in terms of tourism outweighed the risks.

“We think the sea, which is particularly beautiful around these islands, can become a real museum,” she said.

“In the future, not so far off, a lot of people will be able to go down and see the wreckage themselves.”

(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie; editing by Andrew Roche)

Credit Agricole nears Intesa branch deal -paper

PARIS, April 2 (Reuters) – Credit Agricole (CAGR.PA) could conclude talks to buy 150-200 branches from Italian bank Intesa Sanpaolo (ISP.MI) this month following a deal with Italy’s antitrust authorities, La Tribune newspaper said on its website.

Financials

The purchase was first announced in February, and the paper said on Friday that Credit Agricole was now in advanced negotiations to purchase 85 branches of Intesa unit Cassa di Risparmio della Spezia, in Liguria in northwest Italy.

In addition, the French bank will buy a further 80-100 branches chosen for their proximity to the others to help Credit Agricole strengthen its position in the richer northern part of Italy, the newspaper said.

A final decision should be taken shortly before Intesa’s annual meeting on April 30, La Tribune said.

Credit Agricole declined to comment on Friday.

Under the terms of the February deal, the French bank said it had agreed with Italian regulators to take control over an additional 150-200 Intesa branches, bringing its total to around 900 branches in Italy. [ID:nLDE61H2MA] Under the February agreement, designed to help Intesa avoid paying a hefty antitrust fine, the Italian authorities said Credit Agricole was required to reduce its shareholding in Intesa to 2 percent by the end of 2011 from 5.8 percent.

Italy’s antitrust body was worried that the presence of Credit Agricole in Intesa Sanpaolo would distort competition in the country’s banking sector, given that the French bank already controlled Italian regional bank Cariparma. (Reporting by James Regan and Julien Ponthus; editing by Simon Jessop)

Italian police seize Maradona’s diamond studs

Rome, Sep 19 (ANI): Beleaguered football legend Diego Maradona had to hand over his diamond studs to police as part payment for the millions he owes the Italian tax authorities.

Italian officials paid the holidaying Argentinean coach a visit at the luxury hotel he was staying in and seized the earrings worth nearly 4,000 pounds, Sky News reports.

Police claimed that Maradona still owes some 20 million pounds, dating back to his seven-year stint at the Italian club Napoli, where he frequently failed to pay income tax.

After fleeing Buenos Aires on Monday following Argentina’s four defeats in five matches of 2010 World Cup qualifier, Maradona, 48, is currently staying at a spa in the town of Merano in north-eastern Italy, where he is trying to lose weight.

Italian authorities had seized two of his Rolex watches worth 11,000 pounds in 2006, when he was staying near Naples.

In 2005, they seized the money he was to receive for taking part in a TV dancing show.

Four years earlier, he was met by 20 police officers as he got off a plane in Rome.

Italy’s Supreme Court ordered the ex-footballer to pay 36 million euros in unpaid taxes.

According to the association of Italian taxpayers, Maradona still has 22.4 million euros to pay.

Recently, Brazilian legend Pele took a blow at Maradona, saying he feels another Argentine-born player, Alfredo di Stefano, is the best player ever.

“Maradona was a great player, but he could not kick with his right foot and did not score goals with his head.

The only time he scored an important goal with his head, it turned out he had used his hand,” Pele said referring to Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal against England in 1986 World Cup. (ANI)

Italian quake death toll rises to 250

Rome – The death count from Monday’s central Italian earthquake has risen to 250, Italian authorities reported on Wednesday.

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

Eleven of the bodies pulled from the rubble remain unidentified.

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

Italy quake toll reaches 27

Rome, April 6 (DPA) Twenty-seven people were killed Monday when a major earthquake rocked the central Italian region of Abruzzo, media reports quoted hospitals as saying.

The regional capital L’Aquila and the ancient town of Castelnuovo were especially badly hit in the quake, which had a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale, and many more deaths were feared once a clearer picture emerged.

Four children were reported to have died in a hospital in L’Aquila, where numerous buildings also collapsed, including a student dormitory in the city’s historic centre, plus a four-storey building where up to 20 people were feared trapped.

The quake shook thousands of people from sleep and caused them to flee their homes. Thousands of houses were damaged, and police said numerous people were injured.

Cracks appeared in many houses after the quake, which was also felt in Rome and the Marche region.

The dome of a church in central L’Aquila caved in while the city’s cathedral was also damaged.

Emergency services authorities in Italy said the quake struck at 3.32 a.m. (0132 GMT) north of L’Aquila with a magnitude of 5.8 on the Richter scale and a depth of five kilometres.

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 services were cut off in several areas.

Emergency services informed Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and President Giorgio Napolitano of the quake and warned people living in the quake zone not to drive.

Greek students among injured and missing in Italian earthquake

Athens – A Greek female student was injured and hospitalised, while her brother was reported missing in the powerful earthquake that struck the medieval city of L’Aquila in central Italy Monday, Deputy Foreign Minister Thoedoros Kassimis said.

The foreign ministry said that a Greek military C-130 aircraft was on stand-by to carry emergency rescue teams to the stricken area if requested from Italian authorities.

European Court gives Italy nod in ex-porn-star MP’s custody war

European Court gives Italy nod in ex-porn-star MP's custody warRome/Strasbourg – The European Court of Human Rights ruled Tuesday in favour of Italy’s judiciary’s decision to grant former porn-star and Italian parliamentarian Ilona Staller custody of her son with US artist Jeff Koons.

“I am happy for this decision even if it comes after more than 14 years of battles in the courts,” Staller, who during her porn career used the name La Cicciolina (The Cuddly One), told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

Speaking by phone from Buenos Aires, where she was participating in a television dance reality show, the 56-year-old Staller said her son Ludwig also welcomed the decision.

“Ludwig is turning 16 later this month and has only had sporadic contact with his father over the last three years,” she told dpa.

“He has always made it clear he wants to live with me,” she said.

Koons had sought recourse to the Strasbourg-based Court of Human Rights against Italy’s decision allowing Ludwig to live with his mother in Rome, which Koons said prevented his son from visiting him at his home in the United States.

Koons had also complained against the Italian judiciary’s decision, first taken in the 1990s to award custody to Staller.

But on Tuesday the Court of Human Rights noted that Italian authorities had made a “thorough assessment of the family situation and the interests of all concerned, especially those of Ludwig in order to find the solution most likely to provide him with a stable home environment.

“Italian judicial authorities had made every effort to protect the higher interests of the child, while always recognizing the applicant’s (Koons) right of contact, in a difficult situation marked by constant disagreement between the parties and their inability to put their son’s well-being first,” the court said.

The decision to rule in Italy’s favour was made by five votes to two.

Hungarian-born Staller attracted international media attention in 1987 when she successfully stood for parliament in Italy’s elections, often baring her breasts at political rallies.

In 1990 she married Koons, celebrated for his kitsch sculptures and other works including starkly sexual images of Staller.

The couple separated in 1992, the year Ludwig was born, and divorced six years later. (dpa)