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  • Updated
    8
    May
    2013
    3:10pm, EDT

    Six killed, three missing as ship strikes control tower in Italy

    Francesco Pecoraro / AP

    Rescuers search what is left of the toppled control tower in the port of Genoa, Italy, after a cargo ship slammed into it on Tuesday.

    By James Mackenzie, Antonella Cinelli and Steve Scherer, Reuters

    GENOA, Italy -- Six people were killed and three are missing after a container ship crashed into a control tower in the northern Italian port of Genoa, rescuers said on Wednesday.

    The tower, which was more than 160 feet high and looked much like the ones common at airports, collapsed into the water late on Tuesday after being struck by the prow of the vessel, the Jolly Nero.

    Six people died and three are missing after a cargo ship ran into a control tower in Genoa, Italy. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Two of the dead were coastguard officers and a third was a pilot for the port, the coastguard said.

    The three other victims have yet to be identified. Two were recovered from the wreckage of the tower's lift, a firefighters' spokesman said.

    The accident happened as staff were changing shifts and there were 13 people in the tower when it was struck, the coastguard said.

    As well as the dead and missing, officials said four people were injured and had been taken to hospital. Two were seriously hurt and one had lost a foot, investigators said.

    "The main injuries are fractures, crushed body parts, significant traumas," emergency services doctor Andrea Furgani said.

    The crash occurred shortly after 11 p.m. (5 p.m. ET) in calm conditions as the Jolly Nero was maneuvering out of the port.

    Genoa prosecutor Michele Di Lecce has opened an investigation and is focusing on a possible malfunction of the ship's engine or steering mechanism, judicial sources said.

    The crash is the most serious maritime accident in Italy since the Costa Concordia luxury cruise liner struck a rock and capsized off the island of Giglio in January 2012, killing 32 people.

    Massimo Cebrelli / AFP - Getty Images, file

    This 2011 photo shows the control tower at the Italian port of Genoa.

    "There's no logical explanation because two tug boats were moving the ship and there was a port pilot on board and sea conditions were optimal," the head of the Genoa Port Authority, Luigi Merlo, said.

    The only thing left where the tower had stood was a leaning metal-framed stairway. Divers from the fire department joined the search for bodies.

    The Jolly Nero, which is 781 feet long with a gross tonnage of 40,594 metric tons, is owned by local operator Ignazio Messina and Co.

    "A thing like this has never happened, we are devastated," said Stefano Messina, one of the directors of the family-owned firm, who was in tears when he spoke to a local TV channel.

    This story was originally published on Wed May 8, 2013 7:14 AM EDT

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    99 comments

    It could have been Pigotry!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, europe, ship, featured, updated, genoa, control-tower, jolly-nero
  • 7
    May
    2012
    8:40am, EDT

    Attack on Italian nuke chief raises fears of anarchist violence

    Luca Zennaro / EPA

    Italian military police investigate the site where Roberto Adinolfi, the chief executive of a state-controlled nuclear company, was shot in Genoa, Italy, on Monday.

    By msnbc.com and news services

    MILAN - The head of a nuclear power company was shot in the leg by an unidentified gunman in Italy on Monday, police said, in an incident reminiscent of politically motivated violence that raged in the country in the 1970s and 1980s.

    Roberto Adinolfi, chief executive of Ansaldo Nucleare, a company linked to Italian defence conglomerate Finmeccanica, was shot in the street outside his house in Genoa in northern Italy, police said.


    Shooting people in the legs was a trademark practice by the Red Brigades, a left-wing guerrilla group that carried out a campaign of murder and kidnapping aimed at destabilizing Italy in the 1970s and 1980s.

    An investigative source told Reuters two people on a motorbike wearing helmets had fired three shots, hitting him in the leg. The bullet fractured his right knee but he was not in serious condition, the source said.

    The investigative source said magistrates were considering whether anarchists might have been responsible for the attack.

    The anarchist movement has a strong presence in the city and, according to Italian news agency Ansa, police were looking at recent pronouncements by some anarchist groups calling for "a shift to a new phase that could lead to armed action," BBC News reported.

    Politicians from all sides were quick to condemn Adinolfi's shooting, some of them blaming a spreading "climate of hatred" in the recession-hit country.

    "We hope investigators can find as quickly as possible those responsible for an act that brings us back to a very sad chapter of Italian history," said Lorenzo Cesa of the centrist UDC party.

    Finmeccanica controls Ansaldo Energia, the parent of Ansaldo Nucleare. The Genoa attack would be "extremely serious" if it was linked to political and social frictions, said the chief financial officer of Finmeccanica, Alessandro Pansa.

    Austerity measures by the government of Prime Minister Mario Monti to control Italy's huge public debt have caused mounting resentment, although protests have generally been peaceful and there have been no real signs of organised political violence.

    A string of suicides, notably among businessmen suffering financial problems, has however underlined the human cost of the crisis. Last week, a 54-year-old man took a hostage in the offices of tax agency Equitalia in an act of desperation although the incident ended without violence.   

    Reuters contributed to this report. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    38 comments

    Contrary to popular belief, Italy has always had a reputation for having volatile anti-government sentiments rise to the surface fairly frequently. This is actually nothing new, even though it has been sort of quiet for a number of years.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, anarchist, featured, genoa, finmeccanica, ansaldo-nucleare

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