At least two people were killed in the quake that struck just before 9 p.M. (1900 GMT) yesterday, while another 39 were injured and some 2,600 were left homeless. The victims were an elderly woman who was in a church that crumbled in the quake, and a second person who was located in the rubble but had not yet been extracted.
It took another seven hours to free the middle brother, 8-year-old Matthias, who was pictured in his underwear and covered with cement dust before being quickly loaded onto a stretcher and into an ambulance, and two more hours to free the eldest boy, 11-year-old Ciro, who was credited with helping save Matthias.
The children's parents were waiting for Ciro at the hospital's emergency room, his mother sitting in a wheelchair next to his father, Alessandro, whose hands were bandaged reportedly from injuries suffered while trying to dig through the rubble to reach his children.
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He said his wife was in the bathroom and managed to escape through the window but the older boys were in the bedroom in the family home in hardest-hit Casamicciola. The baby was in a playpen in the kitchen.
The head of the financial police on the island said it was Ciro who saved Mattias, pushing him under the bed. "The gesture surely saved them both," said Andrea Gentile. "Then with the handle of a broom he knocked against the rubble, making them heard by rescuers."
The quake hit during the height of the tourist season, and Italian television showed many visitors taking refuge in parks and sleeping under blankets in the aftermath.
Authorities began organising ferries to bring tourists back to the mainland early today.
Together with the nearby island of Capri, Ischia is a favourite island getaway for the European jet set, famed in particular for its thermal waters. Casamicciola was the epicentre of an 1883 earthquake that killed more than 2,000 people.
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