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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Italy declares state of emergency in quake zone
by Staff Writers
Rome (AFP) May 22, 2012


The Italian government declared a state of emergency in the quake-struck region of northeast Italy on Tuesday, where 5,000 people were camped out in temporary shelters amid fears of aftershocks.

The government declared a 60-day state of emergency for the area around Bologna, Modena and Ferrara and promised 50 million euros ($63 million) in aid to help rebuild houses and family-owned factories destroyed in the earthquake.

Owners of damaged property will also temporarily be exempt from property tax, the government said in a statement.

Prime Minister Mario Monti visited several of the quake-struck towns Tuesday and met the families of victims of Sunday's 6.0-magnitude quake, which killed six people and reduced homes and historic buildings to rubble.

Dozens of aftershocks have hit the region since the quake, with only two registering over 3.0-magnitude according to the Geophysics Institute.

Rescue workers in the so-called "red zone" in the town of Finale Emilia, the epicentre, said damaged buildings had remained stable since Monday, with no further significant collapses of weakened buildings.

"At the moment the percentage of houses declared uninhabitable is very low," said Demetrio Egidi, head of Italy's civil protection agency in Emilia-Romagna, where firemen were carrying out house-to-house controls to check for damage.

The region's priceless architectural treasures were worst hit, with churches, chapels and castles wrecked and famous frescoes destroyed.

"We don't yet know the extent of the damage to heritage, but as far as architectural structures go, it's been a real disaster," said Massimiliano Righini, a culture official for the town of Finale Emilia.

Thousands of people were camped out in parked cars in supermarket car parks or public squares amid fears that aftershocks might bring houses down, or in tent cities set up by the authorities.

"We hope that once people calm down, they will return to their homes," Egidi said, adding that the tent camps could hold up to 5,800 people.

Monti, who cut short a trip to the United States where he was attending a NATO summit, slept in the nearby city of Ferrara on Monday before heading to Sant'Agostino, where the clock was stuck at 4:05 am -- the hour the quake hit.

A relative of Nicola Cavicchi, 35, one of four factory workers killed, said: "It was a terrible quake, unthinkable that it should happen to us".

"It was fate. If he had been standing five metres away, nothing would have happened to him. He was just doing his job," the relative told reporters.

Sunday's quake rattled the cities of Ferrara -- a UNESCO World Heritage site -- as well as Bologna, Verona and Mantua and several smaller towns.

"Damage to businesses is going to run to no less than hundreds of millions of euros," a local branch of employers' organisation Confindustria said.

At least 200 businesses and 2,000 workers in the region would be severely affected, the organisation said. The left-wing CGIL union said the figure was likely to be much higher, with around 5,000 workers affected.

Monti's visit sparked a small demonstration by Sant'Agostino residents, who chanted anti-government slogans, complaining about tax hikes and austerity measures which they protest are strangling a country hit by recession.

"Thieves! Shame on you. You should have stayed home," they shouted, while another said Monti had just come to take advantage of the "media circus."

The disaster struck just over three years after a 6.3-magnitude quake devastated the city of L'Aquila in central Italy in March 2009, killing some 300 people and leaving tens of thousands homeless.

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Night-shift workers hardest hit by Italy quake
Milan (AFP) May 22, 2012 - The earthquake that shook northeast Italy before dawn on Sunday took a heavy toll on the industrial region's night-shift workers, with four of the disaster's six victims killed at factories.

When the quake struck at 4:04 am (0204 GMT), Leonardo Ansaloni, Nicola Cavicchi, Gerardo Cesaro and Tarik Naouch were not asleep like most Italians but working at factories that -- like many around the town of Finale Emilia, the quake's epicentre -- operate 24 hours a day.

The 6.0-magnitude quake made a tremendous noise, but workers at Tecopress in the small town of Dosso, where Cesaro was killed, said they did not even notice it over the roar of the smelting works.

"We didn't hear it, the noise was too loud," said Ghulam Murtaza who worked with Cesaro, who was loading aluminium sheets when the quake hit and did not have time to run out with his colleagues as the building collapsed.

Like much of Italy's north -- the engine of the national economy -- this part of the Emilia-Romagna region is dotted with family-owned factories.

The area is well-known for its tile industry, a sector that is performing well despite an economy in recession and the pinch of the global crisis, thanks to worldwide exports of Italian tiles and earthenware.

Ansaloni and Cavicchi worked for Ceramica Sant'Agostino, a family business renowned in the industry that employs 350 people.

The two were trapped inside when their building came down like a house of cards around them.

Cavicchi was not supposed to be at work that day but had agreed to fill in for a sick colleague after seeing the bad weather forecast and deciding against going to the beach, as he did nearly every weekend.

"Luckily this happened in the middle of the night between Saturday and Sunday. My heart is torn to pieces for the two workers, it's horrible. But if this had happened on Monday or Tuesday, 200 people would be down there," said the owner's son Filippo Manuzzi, quoted in the newspaper La Stampa.

But the collapse of these factories poses the question of whether local businesses have been following building codes in this seismically unstable region.

"It's not really acceptable in a modern society for things like industrial buildings to collapse after a tremor that, yes, had a certain magnitude but was not exceptional," said the president of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, Stefano Gresta.

Ceramica Sant'Agostino responded to such concerns saying its buildings had been constructed "according to maximum security criteria".

Naouch for his part worked for a company called Ursa that makes polystyrene in the town of Bondeno.

A 29-year-old Moroccan, he came to Italy in 1994 like many north African immigrants drawn to the country's industrial north, whose labour has helped fuel an almost steady economic boom over the past several decades.

He had worked for six years at Ursa and had just gotten papers for his young wife to join him in Italy.

He was replacing the shift boss the day the earthquake struck. Colleagues said he went back inside the factory to close the gas line and was killed by a falling girder.



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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
One year after tornado, Obama sees US city as example
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 21, 2012
US President Barack Obama on Monday cited the courage of Joplin residents as an inspiration for the rest of the country nearly one year after a powerful tornado killed 161 people in this Midwestern town. The twister, a massive funnel cloud that struck on May 22, ranked as one of the deadliest tornado to hit the United States since 1947. Obama traveled to the town of 50,000 to talk to stu ... read more


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