At least four people were killed on Thursday afternoon after a cable car plunged to earth, rolled down a mountainside and broke apart on Monte Faito, south of Naples, Italian officials said.
A fifth person was in critical condition, according to Luca Cari, a national spokesman for Italy’s firefighters. “These are very ugly situations,” he said in a phone interview.
The cause of the crash was not immediately clear. The nationalities and identifications of four of the victims, described by officials as tourists, were not immediately released. One victim was an employee of EAV, the public transportation company that manages the cable car, officials said.
Nine people became trapped on another cable car that had stalled lower in the valley, near the town of Castellammare di Stabia, because of the crash, Mr. Cari said. They were rescued by firefighters who managed to bring them to the ground one by one using harnesses.
Prosecutors in the nearby town of Torre Annunziata, which has judicial oversight over Castellammare di Stabia, have opened an investigation into the crash.
More than 50 firefighters were involved in the rescue operations. Some worked to remove a piece of cable that had fallen on a local railway and onto the roof of a house, according to statement by the firefighters.
Bad weather conditions — high winds and fog — made rescue operations difficult “even on foot,” Vincenzo De Luca, the governor of the Campania Region, which contains Monte Faito, told the national broadcaster, RAI.
Mr. De Luca said the cable car was important to the local tourism industry. It travels from Castellammare di Stabia, population 66,000, to a plateau rising more than 3,600 feet and offering breathtaking views of the Gulf of Naples and Mount Vesuvius.
In 2021, 14 people were killed when a cable car crashed near the top of a mountain in the northwestern region of Piedmont, Italy. The cause was determined to be a snapped cable and an emergency brake failure. It was Italy’s deadliest cable car disaster since 1998, when a U.S. military jet severed the cable of a ski lift in the Dolomites, killing 20 people.
Umberto De Gregorio, chairman of EAV, described the crash was an “unimaginable and unpredictable tragedy.” Speaking to RAI, he said that the cable car had begun operating for 10 days before the crash, with the start of the tourist season after a winter hiatus.
Eve Sampson contributed reporting.
Elisabetta Povoledo is a reporter based in Rome, covering Italy, the Vatican and the culture of the region. She has been a journalist for 35 years.
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