A huge avalanche swallowed up a luxury mountain hotel in central Italy after a series of strong earthquakes rocked the area, burying up to 30 people under tonnes of snow and debris, officials said yesterday.
More than 24 hours after the avalanche hit, the Civil Protection department said just two bodies had been recovered.
The first rescue workers only reached the remote site in the early hours of yesterday and it was midday by the time a snow plough and the first mechanical excavation equipment got there.
Rescue workers were continuing their search for other victims or possible survivors as night fell.
“We are trying to recover bodies,” said fire service spokesman Luca Cari.
Asked if there was any hope of survivors, he told AFP: “You never know.”
He added: “The building was basically run over by the avalanche leaving it buried. I saw mattresses that had been dragged for hundreds of metres, which shows how big the search area is. There are tonnes of snow, tree trunks and all kinds of detritus.”
Italian broadcasters showed images of piles of masonry and rubble in the entrance area of what they dubbed a “coffin hotel”.
Titti Postiglione, head of the department’s emergency office, said that more avalanches were possible in the Gran Sasso mountain range in the central Abruzzo region because the temperature was rising, while further quakes were possible.
“This is an enormously complex rescue operation,” she said.
The gabled peaks of parts of the roof and a row of windows were the only sections of the four-storey Hotel Rigopiano still visible after the wall of snow smashed into the four-star spa resort early on Wednesday evening.
“This is a tragedy of enormous proportions,” said Health Minister Beatrice Lorenzin.
Local authorities said about 30 people had been in the building at the time, including two children.
Only a couple of survivors had been found – two men who had been outside when the disaster struck.
“The hotel is almost completely destroyed. We’ve called out but we’ve heard no replies, no voices,” said Antonio Crocetta, a member of the Alpine Rescue squad who was on the scene.
“We’re digging and looking for people,” he told Reuters by phone from the isolated location.
Rescue workers entered what appeared to be a lobby decorated with oil paintings and plants, where a landslide had torn through a wall, television footage showed.
Mattresses and furniture were spotted dozens of metres away and sniffer dogs were brought to the area to help with the search effort.
“I am alive because I went to get something from my car,” one of the two survivors, Giampiero Parete, told medical staff.
Italian media said he had been on holiday with his wife and two children, who were all still missing.
Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni called for national unity, saying that Italy was caught in an “unprecedented vice” of earthquakes and heavy snows simultaneously.
The rescue operation was hampered by metres of snow which has fallen on the Gran Sasso in recent days.
Drifts made snow as deep as 5m (16’) in some places and snow ploughs struggled to cut a path up winding mountain roads.
The first rescuers only managed to arrive at 4.30am (0330 GMT) after having to ski through a blizzard to reach the site.
After dawn broke, emergency services sent in helicopters.
A base camp for rescue workers was set up in the town of Penne, some 10km away, where ambulances waited.
The avalanche shunted the 43-room hotel, which is 1,200m (4,000’) above sea level, some 10m (30’) down the hill, according to media reports.
The disaster struck just hours after four earthquakes with a magnitude of above 5.0 hit central Italy, sparking fears about possible avalanches.
Italian media said guests at the hotel had checked out and were waiting for a snow plough to arrive to open up the road and let them down the mountain.
However, the avalanche struck before they had been able to leave.


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