Up to 30 people were feared to have died Thursday after an Italian mountain hotel was engulfed by a powerful avalanche in the earthquake-ravaged centre of the country.
Italy’s Civil Protection agency confirmed the Hotel Rigopiano had been engulfed by a two-meter (six-feet) high wall of snow and that emergency services were struggling to get ambulances and diggers to the site.
The agency said there had been around 30 guests and staff at the small ski hotel on the eastern lower slopes of the Gran Sasso mountain when the first of four powerful tremors rattled the region on Wednesday morning.
Local media said specialist mountain police who had reached the hotel on skis or by helicopter had begun extracting bodies.
They were quoted as saying there were no signs of life inside the building, which was moved by some 10 meters by the force of the snow.
“There are many dead,” one of the commanding officers, Antonio Crocetta, was quoted as saying.
The rescuers at the hotel were reported to have a snow mobile capable of transporting up to eight people.
Ambulances were blocked by two meters of snow some nine kilometers (5.5 miles) away, according to the civil protection agency.
Antonio Di Marco, president of the province of Pescara, which includes the mountain village of Farindola, close to where the hotel is located, said two people had been found alive.
“We don’t know yet how many people are unaccounted for or dead,” he wrote on his Facebook page.
“What is certain is that the building took a direct hit from the avalanche, to the point that it was moved by 10 meters.”
Farindola mayor Ilario Lacchetta said on his Facebook page that “the dimensions of the avalanche were huge.
“It took the whole hotel with it.” he said.
Source: AFP