Portopalo di Capo Passero
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Portopalo di Capo Passero | |
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Municipal coat of arms |
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Country | Italy |
Region | Sicily |
Province | Province of Syracuse (SR) |
Elevation | 20 m (66 ft) |
Area | 14.9 km² (6 sq mi) |
Population (as of Dec. 2004) | |
- Total | 3,617 |
- Density | 243/km² (629/sq mi) |
Time zone | CET, UTC+1 |
Coordinates | |
Gentilic | portopalesi |
Dialing code | 0931 |
Postal code | 96010 |
Portopalo di Capo Passero (Portupalu in Sicilian, Puortupalu in the local dialect) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Syracuse, Sicily (Italy). It's located about 220 km southeast of Palermo and about 45 km southwest of Syracuse. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 3,617 and an area of 14.9 km².[1]
Portopalo di Capo Passero borders the following municipalities: Pachino.
[edit] Demographic evolution
[edit] History
The sea 19 nautical miles off Portopalo was the scene of the worst shipping disaster to hit the Mediterranean since the Second World War[2]. In the early hours of December 26, 1996, a fishing vessel carrying more than 300 South Asian migrants sank off the coast of Sicily and 283 of them drowned.
The catastrophe happened when the Yohan a merchant ship carrying the migrants from Greece approached the Sicilian Coast and nearly three hundred people were transferred from the freighter to a fishing boat that measured eighteen metres by four. During the operation the two vessels collided and the fishing vessel sank
Some of their bodies remain trapped in the ship’s wreck, 108 metres below the surface. For most of the following years the disaster was considered nothing more than a ghost story. Harbor officials and Fishermen from the port of Portopalo kept silent and the Italian government denied the tragedy ever took place, and refused to accept the testimonies of survivors.
Salvatore Lupo, a local Fisherman began speaking out about the accident in 2001, after he found one of the victims’ identification cards in his fishing net. He then helped a journalist, Giovanni Mario Bellu, working for La Repubblica locate the wreck with an underwater robot equipped with cameras.
[edit] References
- ^ All demographics and other statistics: Italian statistical institute Istat.
- ^ Information regarding this incident is taken from a DW article on the incident
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