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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Italy quake zone hit by aftershocks as 5,000 seek shelter
by Staff Writers
Finale Emilia, Italy (AFP) May 21, 2012

Earthquake puts pressure on Italy's parmesan makers
San Giovanni In Persiceto, Italy (AFP) May 21, 2012 - Parmesan crushed underfoot at a devastated warehouse in Italy filled with the precious cheese after a quake estimated to have cost farmers 200 million euros ($286 million).

Stacks piled high with thousands of wheels of Parmigiano Reggiano lay toppled like dominoes at Azienda Caretti -- one of three dairies damaged by Sunday's 6.0-magnitude quake which has been followed by dozens of aftershocks.

"It's a race against time," sighed owner Oriano Caretti, as he inspected the extensive damage, stepping gingerly to avoid falling cheeses in the vast parmesan-scented warehouse -- about the size of a football field.

"We have to try and sort the intact ones from the damaged ones," he said.

The Italian Farming Confederation estimates that around 130,000 wheels of certified Parmigiano Reggiano and the less-exclusive Grana Padano have been damaged, saying that loss alone would be around 40 million euros.

Another farm group, Coldiretti, said around 400,000 wheels had been damaged.

The most affected Parmesan wheels have been the less seasoned ones -- with around six months of maturation. Farmers said the damaged wheels will be inspected for food safety standards and could then be sold as grated cheese.

The Emilia Romagna region, where the quake killed six people and caused extensive damage to historic buildings has some of Italy's richest farmland.

The area is known for many delicacies incluing Parmesan, Parma ham, balsamic vinegar from Modena and Bolognese sauce, which are exported around the world.


Thousands of people prepared to spend a second night sheltering in cars and tent cities in northeast Italy Monday after a strong earthquake killed six people and caused massive damage.

Sunday's 6.0-magnitude quake reduced homes and historic buildings to rubble in sparsely populated countryside around the city of Ferrara, Italy's industrial heartland but also home to priceless architectural treasures.

Firefighters and police made house-to-house checks and rescuers set up four tent cities in Finale Emilia -- the epicentre of the quake -- to provide shelter for thousands of people, with many still too traumatised to return home.

In all some 5,000 people have been put up in various shelters in Modena and Ferrara, said the latter's prefect, Luigi Mauriello.

Hospital evacuees were also being cared for in temporary structures.

"We're worried we might be here a long time. Our house is more than 100 years old," said Maria, a pensioner, as she stood under an umbrella in the rain outside a large blue tent set up by Italy's civil protection agency.

Dozens of aftershocks were felt through the night and heavy rains lashed the area, hampering the efforts of emergency workers who arrived from all over Italy and were operating around the clock to offer food and shelter.

Gas, water and electricity supplies had been cut in many areas and rubble and roof tiles still lay strewn in the streets of dozens of villages.

"We'll stay here until the situation calms down," Sebastiano Lucchi, the manager of one of the tent camps in Finale Emilia, told AFP.

Prime Minister Mario Monti, who cut short a trip to the United States where he was attending a NATO summit, was due to visit the hardest-hit areas on Tuesday.

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.

Six people were killed in Sunday's quake, including four night-shift workers in collapsed factories. A 37-year-old German woman and another woman aged over 100 reportedly died from shock while about 50 other people were injured.

The quake rattled the cities of Ferrara -- a UNESCO World Heritage site -- as well as Bologna, Verona and Mantua and several smaller towns in what one Italian newspaper dubbed "Nightmare Night".

Many historic buildings, including churches and castles, were reduced to rubble while cars were crushed under falling masonry, and in Finale Emilia the town's clock tower was dramatically sliced in two.

In Sant'Agostino the clock was stuck at 4:05 am -- the hour the shock hit.

The roof also caved in at a recently renovated 16th-century chapel in San Carlo, exposing statues of angels and a crucifix to the elements. Fragments of the church's famous frescoes could be seen in the rubble.

Claudio Fabbri, a 37-year-old architect, told AFP the restoration had taken eight years. "Now there's nothing left to do," he said despondently.

Giancarlo Rivelli, one of a team of engineers helping to inspect buildings, said: "There's damage to the psychological heritage here.

"People identify with these buildings. They're part of their life."

Rivelli explained that one of the problems was that some of the old buildings had been sloppily renovated, for example with reinforced concrete.

"It's like trying to cure a hunchback by putting a 100-kilogramme (268-pound) weight on his shoulders," he said.

Warehouses storing more than 300,000 wheels of Parmesan and Grana Padano, a similar cheese collapsed.

The Emilia Romagna region has some of Italy's richest farmland and is known for many delicacies including Parmesan, Parma ham, balsamic vinegar from Modena and Bolognese sauce, which are exported around the world.

In all, some 250 million euros (�320 million) of farm products are estimated to have been lost as a result of the quake, an industry official said.

A 5.1-magnitude aftershock struck Sunday afternoon, triggering the collapse of several structures already weakened, with one firefighter left seriously injured after falling from a wall.

Yet in a show of calm, officials opened polls as planned for the second round of local elections in several cities and voting continued on Monday.

European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso said Brussels was "ready to provide swiftly any assistance that may be requested."

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Night-shift workers hardest hit by Italy quake MILAN, May 22, 2012 (AFP) - 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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