| An Italian military carabinieri walks on debris past destroyed buildings after an earthquake, in downtown Aquila, in this April 6, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi/Files |
By Alberto Sisto | Reuters
L'AQUILA, Italy (Reuters) - Six scientists and a government official were sentenced to six years in prison
for manslaughter by an Italian court on Monday for failing to give
adequate warning of an earthquake that killed more than 300 people in
L'Aquila in 2009.
The seven, all members of a body called the National Commission
for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks, were accused of
negligence and malpractice in evaluating the danger and keeping the
central city informed of the risks.
The case has drawn condemnation from international bodies including the American Geophysical Union,
which said the risk of litigation may deter scientists from advising
governments or even working in seismology and seismic risk assessments.
"The issue here is
about miscommunication of science, and we should not be putting
responsible scientists who gave measured, scientifically accurate
information in prison," Richard Walters of Oxford University's
Department of Earth Sciences said.
"This sets a very
dangerous precedent and I fear it will discourage other scientists from
offering their advice on natural hazards and trying to help society in
this way."
The 6.3 magnitude earthquake
struck L'Aquila, in the Abruzzo region, at 3:32 a.m. on April 6,
wrecking tens of thousands of buildings, injuring more than 1,000 people
and killing 308.
At the heart of the
case was the question of whether the government-appointed experts gave
an overly reassuring picture of the risk facing the town, which
contained many ancient and fragile buildings and which had already been
partially destroyed three times by earthquakes over the centuries.
Eva's lawyer Alfredo Biondi said the decision was "wrong in both fact and law" but the verdict, delivered in a tiny improvised court room in an industrial zone outside the still-wrecked city center, was welcomed by relatives of the victims.
"This is not thirst for revenge, it is just that our sister is not coming back," said Claudia Carosi.
More than three years later, much of the once-beautiful medieval city is still in ruins and thousands of people have been unable to return to their homes.
Defense lawyers said earthquakes could not be predicted and even if they could, nothing could be done to prevent them.
"If an event cannot
be foreseen and, more to the point, cannot be avoided, it is hard to
understand how there can be any suggestion of a failure to predict the
risk," defense lawyer Franco Coppi said before the verdict was
delivered.
"INCOMPLETE, IMPRECISE"
Prosecutors, who
had only sought a four-year sentence, said they did not expect
scientists to provide a precise forecast.
But they argued the
Commission had given "incomplete, imprecise and contradictory"
information on the danger after a meeting on March 31, 2009, a few days
before the earthquake.
Central Italy is
continuously shaken by low level tremors, very few of which precede
bigger earthquakes and they are generally marked by no more than a brief
statement from civil protection authorities.
Key to the dispute
is the kind of cautious language, hedged by caveats and reserves which
scientists typically use in predicting highly uncertain events, but
which can be of limited use as a guideline for the general public.
According to
scientific opinion cited by prosecutors, the dozens of lower level
tremors seen before the quake were typical of the kind of preliminary
seismic activity seen before major earthquakes such as the one that
struck on April 6.
Instead of
highlighting the danger, they said the experts had made statements
playing down the threat of a repeat of the earthquakes which wrecked the
town in 1349, 1461 and 1703, saying the smaller shocks were a "normal
geological phenomenon".
Italy
is among the most earthquake-prone countries in Europe and has been
struck repeatedly by lethal shocks, most recently in May 2012, when 16
people were killed and hundreds injured by a 5.8 tremor in the Emilia
Romagna region.
(Additional
reporting by Cristiano Corvino and Kate Kelland in London, writing by
James Mackenzie; Editing by Alison Williams)
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