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Italy hit by four powerful earthquakes in four hours, bringing terror to region trying to recover from last year's deadly tremors

Nick Squires

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1/18/17

A soldier shovels snow in Amatrice, central Italy, Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2017. Four strong earthquakes shook the same region of central Italy that suffered deadly temors last year, sending quake-rattled residents into panic and further isolating towns that have been buried under more than three feet of snow for days. Credit: Emiliano Grilloti/Ansa

Italy was hit by four earthquakes in four hours on Wednesday, bringing fear and foreboding to the same mountainous region that was struck by deadly tremors last year.

The four quakes, which came in quick succession, caused buildings to collapse but miraculously resulted in no deaths or injuries.

They affected already badly-damaged towns and villages in the regions of Abruzzo, Lazio and Marche, where around 300 people lost their lives last August. 

The area is blanketed in heavy snow after unusually severe winter weather over the last week. Snowstorms made the job of emergency services even harder than usual, with vehicles struggling to reach remote areas to check on mountain villages and outlying farms.

A soldier stands near the collapsed Sant'Agostino bell tower after a 5.4-magnitude quake in Amatrice, Italy, 18 January 2017. Parts of some structures collapsed, including the bell tower of the Sant'Agostino church in Amatrice, the town worst-hit by the August quake. Four earthquakes shook central Italy on 18 January in a region renowned for its devastating seismic activity. Credit: Emiliano Grilloti/EPA

The quakes were so strong that they caused buildings in distant Rome to shake, with office workers rushing out onto the streets, schools ordered to close and the metro temporarily suspended. 

The first tremor happened at 10.25am local time, with the last felt shortly after 2.30pm. The magnitudes of the quakes varied between 5.3 and 5.7.

The bell tower of a church was brought crashing down in Amatrice, the hilltop town that was worst hit by the August earthquake.

 

The epicentre was the village of Montereale, north of the city of L’Aquila, which was devastated by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake in 2009 that killed 300 people. 

“Everyone is outside. It's very cold and windy," said Lina Mercantini, who lives in the village of Ceselli in Umbria, 50 miles from the epicentre. "This is totally unnerving. It's never ending. We are all shaking."

A road sign in the snow, near Amatrice, Italy. A great deal of snow has fallen in the area, which was hit by four quakes on Wednesday. CONTINUE READING........    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/18/italy-hit-four-powerful-earthquakes-four-hours-bringing-terror/