Following two powerful 6.1 and 5.5 magnitude quakes on Wednesday which left almost 5,000 people homeless, Italy's national geophysics institute (INGV) has recorded almost 700 tremors, with experts saying they could go on for weeks or months.
Italy's civil protection agency has offered financial support to those whose houses were damaged, allowing them to relocate on their own, take a room in designated residences nearby, or move to hotels on the coast some 80 kilometres (50 miles) away.
In the town of Ussita, one of the areas most affected by the quakes, some 260 people took refuge in the local campsite, moving into the small wooden bungalows on site.
Lara Manzoni, who works at a frozen pizza company the premises of which were damaged in the quake, has come to help out at the campsite bar instead.
Also Read
"I sent my children to my mother in Bergamo (in northern Italy) to keep them safe, but I could not see myself leaving all these people in trouble," she said.
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi visited the area yesterday, promising those affected that "Italy does not abandon its citizens".
"The earthquake has tested us, but we are stronger," he said, unlocking 40 million euros (USD 44 million) for the emergency and ruling out survivors spending the winter in tent camps.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content