The Globe and Mail (Thursday, May 15, 2003) Venice, Italy Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi inaugurated an ambitious $4-billion (U.S.)
project to ease the flooding that regularly deluges this celebrated canal
city.
The "Moses" project named after the Biblical figure who parted the
Red Sea is expected to take about eight years.
Hinged barriers will be built on the seabed just off Venice and will be raised
when high tides threaten the city.
"Venice is magnificent, the pride of all Italy," Mr. Berlusconi said on Wednesday
as officials prepared to lay the first stone of the project.
"Attention to saving this patrimony, this marvel, is at the top of the
government's concerns."
High water regularly floods into famed St. Mark's Square and other parts
of Venice, and Venetians and tourists are then forced to walk on raised walkways
to keep their feet try.
Making things worse, the city itself is sinking, the level of the Adriatic
is rising and high tides are becoming more frequent. The project was devised
after years of study.
Some environmental groups criticize it, saying the barriers will turn the
lagoon into a stagnant pond.
Activists in small boats motored into the lagoon on Wednesday to protest
against the project but were blocked by police from getting close to the
ceremony.
The Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20030515.wvenice15/BNStory/International