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Storm threatens historic Roman-era Israeli port

Egypt rain and sandstorms kill at least 31
Cairo (AFP) Dec 13, 2010 - Rain and sandstorms that battered Egypt at the weekend killed at least 31 people, officials said Monday, adding the toll could rise as rescue workers were still sifting through two collapsed buildings. The bodies of six workers were pulled out Monday of the debris of a six-storey textile factory that crumpled under heavy the previous day in the northern port city of Alexandria, the officials said. And one worker among 10 who had been wounded in Sunday's accident died of his injuries, bringing the overall toll of those killed to 10, the officials said. Rescue workers were still looking for about a dozen workers who are thought to be still trapped under the mangled building, they added. In the Nile Delta city of Tanta, a child was killed and nine people hurt when a five-storey residential building came down on Sunday, leaving one person trapped under the rubble.

Building collapses are relatively frequent in Egypt where construction guidelines are flouted and extra floors are often added to buildings without planning permission. Twenty people were killed and more than 40 injured in road accidents Sunday across Egypt blamed on poor visibility from heavy rains and sandstorms, officials said. Meanwhile, a tug boat was trying to pull to safety on Monday an Italian cargo ship stranded off Egypt's northwestern coast with 21 crew on board and 38 containers of toxic paint and resins, the Italian news agency Ansa reported. The ship had broken down three days earlier off the coast of Marsa Matruh. Egypt's main ports in Alexandria and the Red Sea opened on Monday a day after authorities closed them due to high winds, low visibility and heavy rains, officials said. Maritime traffic at the Suez Canal was restored after the entry of south-bound ships was barred on Sunday and north-bound traffic was limited from the waterway, which links the Mediterranean to the Red Sea.
by Staff Writers
Caesarea Port, Israel (AFP) Dec 13, 2010
A massive storm that battered the eastern Mediterranean destroyed the breakers protecting the Roman-era port of Caesarea, threatening to wash away the historic site, officials said Monday.

"In this big storm, the wave breakers that protect the Caesarea shore totally collapsed," said Zeev Margalit, the head of development and preservation at the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.

"Now the port is exposed to the full force of the waves," Margalit told AFP. "It is a matter of time until it all collapses."

Margalit said the agency had warned the government several times in recent months of the danger to the port, which was built by Herod and served as the seat of government for Pontius Pilate.

At the scene, hundreds of large stones lay scattered across the jetty which appeared to have sustained heavy damage from the storm, an AFP correspondent said.

High winds of up to 100 kph (65 mph) whipped up enormous waves, some as high as 12 metres (40 feet), which continuously battered the ancient port making any intervention to protect the site impossible, he said.

Further out, a team of workers tried to clear up the rubbish littering the port which had been dumped there by the sea.

The ruins of the port city, one of the largest in the region in Roman times, is a major tourist attraction in Israel and the Roman amphitheatre continues to host concerts.

It also contains the remains of dozens of buildings from the subsequent Byzantine and Crusader periods, including the moat and fortified walls that surround the site.

In recent times Caesarea has become an upscale residential town, home to some of Israel's wealthiest and most influential citizens. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has a weekend home in the town, some 50 kilometres (32 miles) north of Tel Aviv.

Margalit said it would cost about 60 million shekels (16 million dollars) and take three years to construct a new, modern wave breaker to protect the site.

However, he said the authority had also proposed a six million shekel (1.6 million dollar) emergency plan that would involve construction of a temporary wave break.

"If Israel does not react immediately then a major international heritage site will be lost," Margalit said.



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