Death toll rising in Italy bridge collapse amid desperate search for survivors

FAN Editor

The Italian port city of Genoa began two official days of mourning Wednesday amid an urgent search for survivors of a catastrophic bridge collapse that has claimed at least 39 lives, including three children, authorities said.

“It continues to be a rescue operation until they have searched all the rubble,” Italian fire official Emmanuelle Gissi told ABC News. “They finished one side of the river bank and moved to the other side.”

About 400 rescue workers remain at the scene, working in a dangerous environment in an attempt to find more survivors, Gissi said. Buildings under the bridge were damaged in the collapse and there is concern that the rest of the bridge could fall, he said.

Meanwhile, investigators, tried to establish the cause of the collapse.

Dozens of cars and three trucks fell about 150 feet to the ground Tuesday when Gebona’s Morandi Bridge collapsed one day before Italy’s major summer holiday.

Fifteen people were injured, authorities said.

On Wednesday, Italian transport minister Danilo Toninelli called on the top management of Autostrade, the company operating the bridge, to resign. The government is also in the process of revoking Autostrade’s concession to manage the motorway that included the Morandi Bridge and is also looking into handing out fines to the company, Toninelli said in a Facebook post.

But in a statement, Autostrade, said it had done regular checks on the bridge in accordance with the law.

Antonio Brencich, a professor of engineering at the University of Genoa, has previously called the bridge “a failure of engineering” and that it would be better to demolish the bridge than to keep maintaining it.

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