Italy deaths as Genoa ship hits control tower
Seven people have died and three are missing after a container ship crashed into a control tower in the Italian port of Genoa, officials say.
The Jolly Nero smashed into the 50m (164ft) concrete and glass tower late on Tuesday, causing it to collapse.
Rescue workers have been searching in the rubble for survivors while divers are scouring the surrounding water.
Local media reports say prosecutors have placed the ship's captain under investigation for manslaughter.
The vessel has also been impounded and its "black box" seized by investigators, according to Italy's Ansa news agency.
'Utterly shocked'
The accident occurred at about 23:00 on Tuesday (21:00 GMT), when a shift change was taking place in the control tower and about 13 people were thought to be inside.
Some of the bodies were recovered from the tower's lift.
The Jolly Nero was manoeuvring out of the port with the help of tugboats in calm conditions, on its way to Naples, reports said.
The cause of the crash was not immediately clear, but Genoa's Il Secolo XIX newspaper quoted the Jolly Nero's captain as saying that two engines appeared to have failed and "we lost control of the ship".
The head of the Genoa Port Authority, Luigi Merlo, told the newspaper: "It's very difficult to explain how this could have happened because the ship should not have been where it was."
Two tug boats were moving the vessel, there was a port pilot on board, and sea conditions were "perfect", he added.
"It's a terrible tragedy. We're in turmoil, speechless," Mr Merlo told local TV.
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The ship's owner, Stefano Messina, who arrived at the port soon after the crash, had tears in his eyes as he told journalists: "We are all utterly shocked. Nothing like this has ever happened before, we are desperate."
Genoa is Italy's busiest port. Mayor Marco Doria said there was an average of 14 accidents a year, but that the incident late on Tuesday was unprecedented.
All that was left of the control tower after the crash was a buckled metal exterior staircase.
"It was an incredible sight: the control tower was leaning perilously," the port's nightwatchman told La Repubblica newspaper.
Six of those killed have so far been identified. Two of them - Maurizio Potenza and Michele Robazza - were pilots for the port. Another three - Fratantonio Daniel, David Morella and Marco De Candussio - were coastguard officers. The sixth was Sergio Basso, who worked for a tugboat operator.
Four people were being treated for injuries, two of whom were in critical condition.
"The main injuries are fractures, crushed body parts, significant traumas," emergency services doctor Andrea Furgani said.
The Jolly Nero is almost 240 metres (787 feet) long and has a gross tonnage of nearly 40,600 tonnes. It is owned by the Italian firm Ignazio Messina & Co.
The crash revived memories of the accident involving the Costa Concordia cruise ship off the Italian island of Giglio in January 2012, which left 32 people dead. BBC
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