The 10-year-old girl was pulled alive from the rubble 17 hours after the quake. Photo / AP
A 10-year-old girl was pulled from the rubble after spending 17 hours trapped upside down in debris from the Italian earthquake.
The child was hauled to safety by rescuers who shouted "she's alive" as they carried her from the ruins of a building in the devastated central Italian town of Pescara del Tronto.
Footage shows just the dust-covered legs of the youngster as emergency crews tried desperately to free her from the rubble.
One rescuer could be heard saying: "You can hear something under here. Quiet, quiet." He then urged the child to wriggle free one rescue worker said: "Come on, Giulia, come on, Giulia. ... Watch your head." Cheers broke out when she was pulled out.
It was a brief moment of joy on a day in which at least 159 people were killed in the region following a 6.2-magnitude quake in the early hours of the morning.
She had spent about 17 hours wedged in a collapsed building in what was once a picturesque hamlet. Incredibly, she did not appear to have suffered serious injuries.
Danilo Dionisi, a firefighter from Ascoli Piceno said after the child's rescue: "The ten year old girl was just pulled out now from the rubble and she is being taken to the hospital and that is good news. As far as the rest is concerned, the images speak for themselves, you can see what the town looks like."
The frantic search for survivors of the Italian earthquake was continuing tonight as witnesses likened the hellish scenes to Dante's inferno - and shocking pictures showed how four towns were almost wiped off the map.
It has emerged that five bodies had been pulled from a hotel in Amatrice where 70 people had been staying. Officials said rescuers had been forced to suspend their search at the site because it was too dark and dangerous to continue. One of the people killed in the rubble of the hotel was an 11-year-old boy who had initially given signs of life.
At least 159 people have been killed, including two babies, and 100 people are believed to be trapped under rubble after the 6.2-magnitude quake struck at 3.30am local time this morning while villagers slept in their beds.
Today rescuers spoke of hearing children's screams from the rubble and locals were spotted frantically digging with their bare hands to try and save loved ones.
One man, Guido Bordo, 69, lost his sister and her husband after they were trapped inside their holiday house in the hamlet of Illica, north of hard-hit Amatrice. Before their deaths were confirmed, he had described how he could only hear the sound of cats as he scrambled to find his loved-ones beneath the rubble.
The first victim to be named by local media reports is Marisol Piermarini - an 18-month-old baby who was sleeping in her crib when the house she was staying in Arquata del Tronto collapsed. Mother Martina and father Massimiliano have been taken to hospital with 'many wounds' after being pulled from the rubble.
Tragically, the family had moved to the area from L'Aquila after their home there was destroyed in another earthquake in 2009.
The little girl's grandfather, Massimo Piermarini, said he desperately tried to save his family: "They did not want me to go in because it was all in danger, but I said that I did not care at all, I had to go looking for them, but unfortunately for the girl there was nothing to do."
The quake, which devastated the mountainside towns and villages of Amatrice, Accumoli, Arquata del Tronto and Pescara del Tronto, was so powerful that it even rocked buildings in the centre of Rome and was felt as far away as Croatia.
Survivors today described apocalyptic scenes in towns and villages at the border of three regions - Umbria, Lazio and Marche - near the city of Perugia, which is especially popular with British holidaymakers.
Some of the worst damage was suffered in Pescara del Tronto, a hamlet near Arquata in the Marche region where the bodies of the dead were laid out in a children's play park.