1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Italy: Several dead after cable car accident

May 23, 2021

Fourteen people died and a child was injured after a cable car crashed to the ground near Verbania, in the Piedmont region of northern Italy.

https://p.dw.com/p/3tpGS
Rescuers work by the wreckage of a cable car after it collapsed near the summit of the Stresa-Mottarone line
A rescue team by the wreckage of a cable car after it collapsed near the summit of the Stresa-Mottarone lineImage: Soccorso Alpino e Speleologico Piemontese/AP Photo/picture alliance

Italian authorities said 14 people were killed on Sunday when a cable car plunged 20 meters (65 feet) to the ground near the northern city of Verbania.

The tragedy happened near the top of the Stresa-Mottarone line that links Lake Maggiore with a nearby mountain.

Two children were taken to the hospital with severe injuries, and one of them later died, officials said.

Israel's foreign ministry later named five Israeli citizens who died in the accident, all of them from the same family.

They were Amit Biran, 30, his wife Tal Peleg-Biran, 26, and their son Tom Biran, aged two.

Their other son, Eitan, who is five years old, is being treated in a Turin hospital after being seriously injured.

The other two killed in the incident were Peleg-Biran's grandparents Barbara Cohen Konisky, 70, and Yitzhak Cohen, 82. The couple were visiting from Tel Aviv.

The hospital's director, Giovanni La Valle, was quoted by La Repubblica newspaper as saying that the child's situation was being followed "minute by minute."

"We await the next 48 hours, the situation is critical but there's still hope," he told the Italian daily.

The five-year-old was the only survivor from the crash.

"Serious accident on the Stresa-Mottarone cable car. Alpine rescue, and other rescue teams on site. Two helicopter ambulances intervened," the national alpine rescue service said on Twitter.

Authorities said some of the victims were found trapped inside the car, with others thrown out into the woods.

Images show debris from the crushed cabin in a wooded area where a steep slope makes access difficult.

Broken cable theory

DW correspondent Seema Gupta said it was believed that the accident may have been caused by a broken traction cable.

Alpine rescue service spokesman Walter Milan said the ski lift cables were particularly high off the ground at the location of the accident.

"The cable car fell from a relatively high point and lay down on the ground at the foot of a large forest. Now it appears substantially destroyed on the ground… almost completely crumpled, so the fall was obviously significant," Milan told the Il Messaggero newspaper.

Speaking in Stresa, Italian Transport Minister Enrico Giovannini vowed to get to the bottom of the cause of the crash.

"There are various aspects of this affair that will certainly be clarified," he told journalists.

Prosecutors have opened an investigation into a possible involuntary manslaughter charge.

Verbania Prosecutor Olimpia Bossi said: "The brakes of the security system didn't work. Otherwise the cabin would have stopped. Why that happened is naturally under investigation."

Condolences offered to victims' families

President Sergio Mattarella and Prime Minister Mario Draghi expressed their "profound grief," offering condolences to the victims' families.

European Council President Charles Michel sent out a tweet in Italian expressing his "most sincere condolences to the families and friends who have lost a loved one in this tragic accident."

Regional as well as other EU leaders expressed their sorrow and shock.

It's understood that the cable line was renovated in 2016 and that it had only reopened last month after coronavirus lockdowns.

The 20-minute cable car ride, popular with tourists, links the resort of Stresa with the 1,500-meter (4,900-foot) summit of the Mottarone mountain. The peak overlooks Lake Maggiore and offers spectacular views of the Alps.

The accident is the first to involve a cable car in Italy for more than two decades.

In 1998, a low-flying US military jet severed a cable at an Italian ski resort, killing 20 people.

jsi,rc,jf/mm (AP, AFP, reuters)