Italy bridge: State of emergency follows Genoa disaster

Morandi bridgeImage copyright
EPA

Image caption

Work is still going on to try to find survivors

Italian PM Giuseppe Conte has declared a 12-month state of emergency in the Liguria region in response to the motorway bridge collapse in Genoa.

He also said he would make an initial €5m ($5.7m) available from central funds.

The regional government had requested the action following Tuesday’s collapse, which left 39 people dead.

There has been anger and disbelief in Italy that such a vital structure could have simply given way.

Rescuers have said there is little hope of finding more survivors underneath the Morandi bridge, where almost 40 vehicles fell from a height of 45m (148ft) in Tuesday morning’s collapse.

The cause is not yet known but there have been calls for the heads of the company operating the bridge to resign.

Survivors have also been recalling the horror of the bridge’s collapse.

What is the latest at the scene?

Hundreds of firefighters worked overnight and into Wednesday with lifting gear, climbing equipment and sniffer dogs to try to locate more survivors. But an Italian Red Cross spokeswoman told the BBC’s Tim Willcox that only bodies had been found.

Media captionParts of the bridge can be seen collapsing

The city’s authorities have declared two days of mourning.

There are 16 people being treated in hospital, 12 of them in a serious condition.

Some 440 people were evacuated from the area. Residents of housing blocks under one pillar were ready to move back, but were then told it was cracking and their homes were at risk.

The Morandi bridge, built in the 1960s, stands on the A10 toll motorway, an important conduit for goods traffic from local ports which also serves the Italian Riviera and south-east coast of France.

Who were the victims?

Families in their cars, people going to work, people going on holiday. It could take many more hours to find out exactly how many people died and identify them.

Counsellors are on hand at emergency centres to help relatives.

Some of the names of the victims have been appearing in Italian media.

Among the dead are a family of three – Roberto Robbiano, 44, Ersilia Piccinino, 41, and their young son Samuel.

Read more: The victims of the Genoa Bridge collapse

What have survivors been saying?

One of the most compelling testimonies came from Davide Capello, 33, a former goalkeeper for Serie A side Cagliari.

His car fell 30m in the collapse but came to rest in a pocket between the columns and he survived.

“I was able to get out… I don’t know how my car wasn’t crushed. It seemed like a scene from a film, it was the apocalypse,” he said.

Valentina Galbusera, 43, a doctor, told La Stampa: “The bridge fell in front of me, not even 20m away, I avoided the collapse by only a couple of seconds. I felt the bridge was shaking and I tried to reverse. Then I got out of the car and started running.”

What has the official reaction been?

The measures were requested by the Ligurian governor Giovanni Toti. The Rome government has threatened to fine Autostrade per l’Italia, the company responsible for maintaining the country’s motorways, and to revoke its contract. The highways firm defended its maintenance record, saying it checked the bridge every three months using highly specialised techniques.

Wednesday brought an angry response to the collapse from Transport Minister Danilo Toninelli.

He called on the top management of Autostrade per L’Italia, which oversees maintenance, to resign, saying it had failed to meet its contractual obligations. He said he would seek to fine the company heavily and revoke its operational licence.

The company repeated that it had monitored the bridge quarterly, as required by the law.

Interactive

Genoa bridge collapse before and after

Italian police, August 2018

This image shows the same bridge, shattered, with one of its vertical support columns missing

Google, May 2015

An image shows the bridge as it stood in May 2015, spanning the stream below

The Genoa Public Prosecutor’s Office has opened an investigation into possible negligent homicide. The head prosecutor blamed “human error”.

Were safety warnings ignored?

The state of the bridge and the responses to the collapse throw light on what has been a long-standing debate about Italian infrastructure.

This was the fifth bridge collapse in Italy in five years, according to Corriere Della Sera.

There have been previous reports and comments questioning how the Morandi bridge was built and how long it could last.

In December 2012, the Genoa city council discussed the state of the bridge at a public hearing into how to expand the local transport infrastructure. A local industry confederation official spoke of the collapse of the Morandi bridge “in 10 years”.

In 2016, structural engineer Antonio Brencich spoke of “errors in this bridge”.

The issue of transport in the area is now critical, given that the bridge was a major arterial route for an important port city.

The prime minister has said all infrastructure across the country will be double-checked.

What went wrong at Morandi?

It’s not yet clear. There was torrential rainfall at the time.

A huge tower and sections of the bridge – measuring about 200m – collapsed on to railway lines, a river and a warehouse.

The motorway operator said work to shore up the bridge’s foundation was being carried out at the time.

Autostrade per l’Italia admitted in 2011 the bridge had been suffering from degradation due to heavy traffic.

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Italy bridge: State of emergency follows Genoa disaster