A firefighter who said he pulled a young girl from the rubble in central Italy after this week’s earthquake devastated the region said rescuers “exploded with joy” after finding her alive.
Angelo Moroni described to Italian ANSA news agency the moment he and other firefighters rescued a girl that he said was named Giorgia after digging through the mountains of debris with their bare hands for hours.
“At times like that you don’t think, you go on for hours without feeling thirst or tiredness. We were sure she was safe only when we put her on a stretcher and doctors carried her away. Then we exploded with joy for this great result,” he said.
“The joy was huge.”
The ANSA report said the girl’s her older sister, who was next to her, was killed but that the girls’ parents were pulled out alive.
“I hope Giorgia remembers little of this place, rather I hope she forgets everything,” Moroni told ANSA.
It was not immediately clear whether the girl to whom he was referring was the same as one filmed Wednesday being pulled from the debris. There has been confusion over the name and age of the girl in that video, who emerged apparently in good condition.
The reported rescues are among the few stories of hope since the 6.2-magnitude quake struck Wednesday, killing at least 267 people and injuring 400 others.
72-hour window
The death toll is climbing slowly, and it is unclear how many people remain trapped under the mounds of concrete, brick and stone. The rescue mission entered its third day Friday — still within the crucial 72-hour window, after which the likelihood of survival drops.
“Rescuers are very much aware they’re in a race against time,” said CNN correspondent Frederik Pleitgen, describing the disaster response as swift and well-organized.
But officials’ hopes of finding more survivors were fading, he said.
Aftershocks continue to rattle the region, making the already tough rescue mission even more trying.
“People were just running onto the roads away from buildings in a panic. We saw our cameras shaking, and journalists here too were panicking,” CNN’s Margot Haddad said after a powerful jolt Thursday.
Italian police on Twitter said the first funeral had taken place for a man named Marco Santarelli, the son of a police official, while other victims will be buried in a state funeral Saturday, with Prime Minister Matteo Renzi attending, the Italian government said.
Britain’s Foreign Office said in a statement: “We are providing support to the families of Marcos Burnett and Will and Maria Henniker-Gotley following their tragic deaths in the earthquake in Italy. Our thoughts are with them at this incredibly difficult time.
“British Embassy staff will continue working with local authorities regarding any further British nationals that may require our assistance.”
‘So many dead, so many children’
The Italian Council of Ministers approved a state of emergency Thursday for the regions affected by the earthquake, allocating 50 million euros (about $56.5 million) in funding. Camps were set up to house and feed many of those displaced.
Officials set up a red zone in Amatrice — the hardest-hit town with 207 dead — where buildings crumbled in the aftershocks, many of these weakened structures from the 14th century.
Across the region about 2,100 people are staying in makeshift camps, and more are being built, according to Italy’s Civil Protection agency.
In Sant’Angelo, northeast of Amatrice, people who lost their homes gathered at a camp, sharing their stories of loss.
Angelina Leone could not hide her devastation.
“There is no hope, too many people dead. And Amatrice doesn’t exist anymore. Amatrice has disappeared, and there are so many dead, so many children,” she said, holding back tears.
In another camp, Anna Maria Volpetti, 52, told CNN she had been visiting Accumoli, her hometown, with her family when the quake hit.
“We are lucky,” she said. “The earthquake was brutal. It came in waves.”
Several residents gathered at a square in Amatrice, some of the women crying and hugging to console each other, with dust from the destruction still lingering in the air. Men stood in silence, stoically, too upset to share their stories with reporters.
Images from an Amatrice camp showed people lining up for pasta, while in other camps, chefs cooked pasta and soup in enormous vats to feed hundreds of the displaced.
A man from Rome, who traveled to Amatrice to check on relatives after the quake, gave a harrowing account of how he and his aunt saw two hands sticking out of the rubble.
“This is something I will remember forever,” Francesco Miglio said, adding that his aunt identified the woman as her neighbor.
“And the thing that I will remember for the rest of my life was she had nice hands. I didn’t know the lady, but she had nice hands with nail polish on,” he said.
He and his aunt called out to the woman to move a finger if she could hear them.
“She was gone.”
Destruction of cultural heritage
Central Italy is home to many historic buildings, which are the backbone of the region’s tourism industry.
Earthquakes here not only bring a tragic loss of life but also leave cultural structures damaged or completely destroyed.
CNN affiliate RAI reported damage to 293 pieces of cultural heritage, including 50 that were destroyed.
A Roman Catholic cathedral in Urbino sustained small cracks in its internal structure.
The Monastery of St. Chiara in Camerino, the Basilica of St. Francesco and the church of Sant’Agostino in Amatrice have partially collapsed.
Historic buildings and city walls in Nursia and a cathedral in San Giuliano also were damaged.
Near freezing temperatures
Italy is no stranger to deadly quakes.
In May 2012, a pair of temblors killed dozens of people in northern Italy, while in April 2009, a magnitude-6.3 earthquake hit in the central L’Aquila region, leaving more than 300 people dead. Wednesday’s quake struck an area close to the scene of the 2009 disaster.
Giampiero Antonetti of the civil protection agency in the Abruzzo region saw striking similarities to 2009.
“It’s basically an identical situation,” he said.
“The problems are the same all over the region. First assistance, then what do I do next, then when will my house be available?” he said.
Working in the devastated town of Grisciano, Antonetti said that teams were trying to relocate people out of emergency camps as quickly as possible as the weather in the mountainous area cools.
“We will look for places for them to stay — hotels, with relatives. Yesterday during the night it almost reached freezing, so people cannot be here for a long time.”