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Quake: EU will find sensible solution says Merkel

Italy will take what it needs says Renzi

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Maranello, August 31 - The EU will find a "sensible solution" to Italy's request for budget flexibility after a devastating earthquake struck four of its central regions last week, killing 293 people and causing millions in damage, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after a bilateral summit with Italian Premier Matteo Renzi on Wednesday. "Italy will present a proposal in a transparent way, and I think that we will find a sensible solution in Europe," Merkel said.
    Renzi said Italy "will take what it needs" for his proposed, far-reaching Home Italy project to make the country's buildings anti-seismic.
    "We will follow EU rules" on budget flexibility and "we will take everything we need and is necessary, but it is key we start off by spending money properly," Renzi said.
    Merkel added Germany will finance the rebuilding of a school in earthquake-stricken central Italy. "Our government will make a contribution, as will German entrepreneurs and the German football league," she said.
    Earlier, Renzi announced Ferrari carmaker will auction off one of its luxury models for earthquake relief. "The starting price will be one million euros," Renzi said in Maranello, the Ferrari home town where the Italy-Germany summit was held. He also thanked Ferrari President John Elkann and the CEO of parent company Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Sergio Marchionne.
    Also at the summit, Renzi announced that former Emilia Romagna governor Vasco Errani will be commissioner for post-quake reconstruction. "He'll be nominated tomorrow," Renzi said. "He's been governor of (the) Emilia Romagna (region), which is still standing after a powerful quake four years ago. We pick the same team". Italy "needs to spend the money it already has in the right way," he said. "There will be total transparency... and absolute legality".
    Renzi and Merkel earlier met the fire fighters who rescued an eight-year-old girl in the village of Pescara del Tronto, which was hard-hit by the quake. The meeting in the Modena-area town of Maranello, home to Ferrari luxury carmaker and its Formula One racing team, was attended by delegations from the Civil Protection Department, the fire department, and rescue dog Leo, who first detected the child trapped under meters of rubble. Giorgia was extracted from the debris of her home 16 hours after the 6.2-magnitude quake struck at 0:36 last Wednesday. Her 10-year-old sister was found dead beside her while her parents were both pulled out alive.
   

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