Two people
were killed when the four-star Hotel Rigopiano, at the foot of the Gran
Sasso mountain about (135 kilometers) 85 miles northeast of Rome, was
swallowed by snow after a series of earthquakes.
"There are many dead," Alpine rescuer Antonio Crocetta told Italian state media ANSA Thursday.
Officials say some could have survived in air pockets within the building, however rescuers so far have found no signs of life.
"We are calling out but no one is answering," one searcher told ANSA.
Conditions
are still perilous. Searchers had to suspend operations between 2 and 7
a.m. local time due to fears of avalanche and continued aftershocks.
Rescue operations resumed at first light, hoping for a miraculous survival story.
Italy's
Interior Minister Marco Minniti, briefing reporters in the nearby town
of Penne, said that the families of the missing still held out hope but
were coming to terms with the fact that this was looking increasingly
unlikely.
Luxury hotel
Civil
Protection services said that the hotel was in the process of being
evacuated due to the earthquake when the avalanche hit. Guests had
settled their bills and were waiting together in the lobby with their
luggage.
Officials based estimates
of the missing on guest registration and staff numbers. The hotel has 43
rooms and spa facilities, according to website TripAdvisor.
Italian
fire department spokesman Luca Cari, who was at the scene, told CNN
that the hotel had been "completely slammed" in the avalanche and debris
was scattered as far as 100 meters from the hotel structure, making the
search area large.
The force of
the avalanche was so great that the hotel building has shifted 10 meters
down the slope from its foundations, the Civil Protection Department
said.
Survivors
Two people were rescued from the site of the hotel, Civil Protection Department chief Fabrizio Curcio told journalists.
One
of them was a man vacationing with his wife and two children, 6 and 8,
said he missed being caught in the destruction only because he had
walked to his car to get medicine for his wife just before the avalanche hit.
"The
avalanche came down and I was buried in snow, but I managed to get out.
The car was not buried so I waited there for the rescuers to come," Giampiero Parete was reported to have said.
The whereabouts of his wife, a Romanian national, and their children were unknown Thursday.
Difficult access
Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said the country hadn't seen this much snowfall in decades.
The deep snow combined with the earthquake created a perfect storm of sorts, exacerbating the aftermath of the temblor.
"For
the weather, you tell people to stay in their homes, while for the
earthquake, citizens must be brought outside. Putting together these two
elements is extremely complicated," Curcio said.
Access
to the hotel been difficult, but road crews cleared much of the snow
and fallen trees by Thursday night, allowing heavy rescue equipment to
reach the hotel.
Snow machines and helicopters had earlier taken searchers, including dogs, up the mountain.
Rescuers
battled blizzards and strong winds to reach the site, some having to
ski for several kilometers in the darkness to get there because some
roads were impassable.
When the rescuers arrived, they found only the building's top story and roof visible above the snow.
Video
recorded by rescue teams showed what appears to be a smashed wall or
window in the hotel's lobby, with tree branches, snow and other debris
piled on the floor.
The heavy
snowfall in the 24 hour-period after the quake means that the risk of
more avalanches is still high, CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller said.
Local guests
Authorities
have yet to give a definitive number for those missing. The avalanche
struck at about 5 p.m., meaning unregistered visitors or hikers could
well have been there as well as registered guests.
Many
of the guests are believed to be local people who were taking advantage
of discounted rates to stay in a normally pricey spa hotel before the
peak February skiing season.
One of
the guests had been made homeless by tremors in the Abruzzo region in
August and had booked into the hotel on a break away from their
temporary accommodation.
Poor communications are complicating efforts by authorities to establish who is missing.
People in shelters
Central
Italy was rocked by more than 10 earthquakes Wednesday, four of them
above magnitude 5, according to the US Geological Survey.
Rescuers
were still trying to get to other areas isolated by the avalanche,
Gentiloni said, and authorities were hoping to bring power back to as
many as 90,000 people who were left in darkness overnight from the
extreme weather.
Many people slept
in shelters overnight Thursday to Friday despite the bitter cold and
continuing snowfall because of the fear of more avalanches.
An
initial 5.3-magnitude quake hit in the morning near the town of of
Amatrice, which was devastated by powerful earthquakes in August. The
tremors continued for more than six hours, with one as strong as
magnitude 5.7.
While the epicenter was 90 kilometers (about 55 miles) northeast of Rome, the quake was felt in the capital.
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