Restorers works on an archeological site on February 6, 2013 in Pompeii.
Image by: AFP PHOTO / CARLO HERMANN
Image by: AFP PHOTO / CARLO HERMANN
One the world's most renowned archaeological parks - the ancient Roman city of Pompeii - has been plagued by yet another building collapse, according to Italian news reports.
In the latest incident, caused by heavy rain and wind on Sunday, a wall of an ancient shop in the city's Via Stabiana crumbled, and some plaster fell from the nearby House of the Fountain.
Conservation authorities said repair work would start by mid-December, as the damaged buildings are in an area that was already set to be restored as part of a 105-million-euro ($142 million) project launched in February thanks to European Union funds.
According to Antonio Pepe, a local trade unionist, the fundamental cause of the latest collapse was the fact that "ordinary maintenance work has been neglected for too many years."
Since 2010, at least a dozen buildings at the UNESCO World Heritage site have crumbled, including the famous House of the Gladiators.
Two weeks ago, cracks appeared in another wall and plaster fell from another building at the site.
Several investigations have revealed that past maintenance and restoration work in Pompeii was undermined by corrupt officials and infiltration by the local mafia, the Naples-based Camorra.
Once a prosperous Roman city, Pompeii was destroyed in 79 AD, along with nearby Hercolaneum, by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius that killed thousands of people and buried them in six metres of volcanic ash.
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