The summer sun beats brightly down on the streets of the picturesque Italian mountain town, but the people who walk them are not on holiday. Amatrice has become a mausoleum.
The
town -- home to the beloved Spaghetti all'Amatriciana -- should have
been full of pasta-loving foodies this weekend for the annual festival.
But instead, locals sway through the streets -- disorientated, confused
and disheveled.
At least 281 people have died across the region -- the majority killed
in this rural town -- after a 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck in the
early hours of Wednesday morning. Many more remain unaccounted for.
Builder Roberto Partenza's home was pancaked by the disaster. He described waking up to "a huge sound."
"Everywhere was shaking," he said. "I hugged my wife because I thought that was going to be the last moment of my life."
They
scrambled out from beneath the debris, scooped up their children, along
with a few items of clothing, and escaped to safety.
Others were not as lucky.
It's
been a race against time for emergency responders. The town's isolated
location meant that the first people to dig survivors from the rubble,
were those like Partenza. He and many others began excavating with
whatever tools were available.
"At the beginning we started digging with our hands," he said. "We could hear sounds of people asking for help."
"After a while the first rescue teams started to arrive from the area."
There
is now only one route into the once-charming town -- a winding
circuitous road busy with emergency vehicles hurtling around the small
cliff-facing lanes.
Many roads are cordoned off and bridges are perilously unstable, with rock falls making travel more difficult.
At
the church in Amatrice, Franciscan monks sit huddled together in the
hot summer sun too exhausted to maintain a façade of calm and strength.
Around
6,600 rescuers are at work in the region, according to authorities, but
they know time is against them. With each passing hour, the likelihood
of finding survivors diminishes.
"This city will become a museum city, for people to see that an
earthquake happened here," said Arturo Filippi, an emergency response
volunteer with 16 years experience.
The earth continues to shiver three days on. And with aftershocks, comes the unrelenting fear for residents.
"The future is finished. It's finished. The future is finished," said
Marissa Di Tommaso, 58, a resident who used to work at one of the local
schools.
"My son had two businesses here ... Everything's destroyed."
Tears fall from her eyes.
"What we do?" she asked. "I wanted to stay here but if everybody leaves ... We don't know."
Some have returned to survey the damaged
remnants of their homes. They gathered quietly at squares, where women
sobbed as they clutched each other, grateful to find their friends had
survived.
Men stood in silence staring absently at the detritus at their feet, too upset to speak to reporters.
Afterwards they quietly walked back to one of the few camps set up within the town limits for displaced locals.
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