Their conviction and ruling
by a court in the shattered city defied the commonly held view that earthquakes
cannot be predicted and prompted outrage from the world's scientific community.
One of the victim was quoted as saying - "It was a very Italian and
medieval decision." Another expert
who too was sentenced – who was head of Italy's national geology and
volcanology institute in 2009, compared himself to Galileo, the Italian
scientist who was tried by the Vatican in 1633 for claiming the Earth revolved
around the sun.
A regional court in Italy
found them guilty of multiple manslaughter. Prosecutors said the defendants
gave a falsely reassuring statement before the quake, while the defence
maintained there was no way to predict major quakes. The seven - all members of
the National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks - were
accused of having provided "inaccurate, incomplete and contradictory"
information about the danger of the tremors felt ahead of Apr 2009 quake,
Italian media reported. Though Scientific analysis present it that - the issue is not "if" but
"when" the next tremor will occur in L'Aquila; it is simply not possible to be precise about the
timing of future events. Science does not possess that power. The best it can
do is talk in terms of risk and of probabilities, the likelihood that an event
of a certain magnitude might occur at some point in the future.
The decision to prosecute
some of Italy's leading geophysicists drew condemnation from around the world. The
authorities who pursued the seven defendants stressed that the case was never
about the power of prediction - it was about what was interpreted to be an
inadequate characterisation of the risks; of being misleadingly reassuring
about the dangers that faced their city. The conviction came as a shock to all
researchers in Italy whose expertise lies in the field of assessing natural
hazards. In addition to their sentences,
they were barred from ever holding
public office again. The judge also ordered the defendants to pay court costs
and damages.
Some scientists warned that
the case might set a damaging precedent, deterring experts from sharing their
knowledge with the public for fear of being targetted in lawsuits. In a show of
support, more than 5,000 scientists signed an open letter to Italian President
Giorgio Napolitano in support of the group in the dock. Experts supporting condemned saying "If
the scientific community is to be penalised for making predictions that turn
out to be incorrect, or for not accurately predicting an event that
subsequently occurs, then scientific endeavour will be restricted to
certainties only and the benefits that are associated with findings from
medicine to physics will be stalled’
Now in Nov
2014 comes the news that Scientists jailed for manslaughter because they did
not predict deadly earthquake in Italy which killed 309 people have been
cleared. Some of the Italy's most respected seismologists were among those
jailed for 6 years. The case was watched
closely by seismologists around the world who insist it's impossible to predict
earthquakes and that no major temblor has ever been foretold. In 2011, a
spokesman for the U.S. Geological Society conveyed its opinion that the investigation 'has a medieval flavour
to it - like witches are being put on trial.' In seismology, as with many other
branches of the pure and applied sciences, opinions are derived from
observables and the application of experience and training.
Now the scientific community
is celebrating the news that those convicted have won an appeal against their
conviction on Nov. 10. An appeals court
in L'Aquila overturned the 2012 convictions and completely cleared the six
scientists, according to the Associated Press. However, the Appeals court on Monday upheld
the guilty verdict against De Bernardinis, issuing a two-year sentence. At the
time of the earthquake, De Bernardinis was a deputy director with the Italian
government's Civil Protection unit.
In the eyes
of many, the verdict handed out by an appeals court in the Italian city of
L’Aquila this week represents a return to sanity on the part of the country’s
justice system. The near-complete reversal of the original verdict, no matter
the legal merits involved, may feed the idea that ordinary people are being
ignored. Lawyers representing several relatives of the deceased have said they
will contest the decision in the Court of Cassation, Italy’s highest court of
appeal. The public prosecutor may do likewise. There may thus be yet further
twists in this strange and tragic tale.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
17th Nov. 2014
