News Flash

ROME, Jan 26, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - More than 1,000 people were evacuated in
Sicily after a four-kilometre (2.5-mile) section of cliff crumbled during a
storm, leaving houses perched perilously on the edge, authorities said on
Monday.
Land was continuing to give way due to rain that has soaked the area in
recent days, said the mayor of the southern hill town of Niscemi.
No deaths or injuries have been reported following the landslide, which took
place on Sunday.
"The situation continues to worsen because further collapses have been
recorded," mayor Massimiliano Conti told local news on Monday.
Footage taken on Monday by the Local Team video agency showed a narrow
vertical section of cliff falling away, causing a building that had already
been ripped apart to further collapse.
The front end of a car was visible next to it, its two tyres suspended in the
air over the edge of the cliff.
The landslide covered the road below leading into town.
Conti said local authorities were working with police, fire and civil
protection units to assess the next steps, including the resumption of
school, which was cancelled on Monday.
"The situation is dire," said the mayor.
Italy's civil protection unit said all residents in a four-kilometre radius
of the landslide had been evacuated.
Niscemi, which has a population of more than 27,000 people, is located about
28 kilometres inland from the southern coastal city of Gela.
Coastal areas of Sicily were hit last week by Storm Harry, damaging seaside
roads and residences.
The region's president, Renato Schifani, estimated the cost of the damage
cost at 740 million euros ($876 million).