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Wednesday, January 28, 2026
 
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Huge landslide leaves Sicilian homes teetering on cliff edge as 1,500 people evacuated

publish time

28/01/2026

publish time

28/01/2026

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Aerial view of the village of Niscemi near the Sicilian town of Caltanissetta, southern Italy on Jan 27, where severe storms provoked a landslide, and some 1,500 people had to be evacuated from their homes. (AP)

ROME, Jan 28, (AP): Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni visited a southern town in Sicily on Wednesday that has been left teetering on the edge of a cliff after days of heavy rains from a cyclone triggered a huge landslide that brought down properties and forced the evacuation of over 1,500 people. The landslide in Niscemi, a town in the southwest of the island, spanned 4 kilometers (2.5 miles).

Images showed cars and structures that had fallen 20 meters (yards) off the newly formed cliff, while many other homes remain perched perilously on the cliff edge. Civil protection crews have created a 150-meter wide "no go zone” in the town, which is just inland from the coastal city of Gela. "The entire hill is collapsing onto the plain of Gela,” civil protection chief Fabio Ciciliano said.

"To be honest, there are houses located on the edge of the landslide that obviously can no longer be inhabited, so we need to work with the mayor to find a permanent relocation for these families.” Authorities have warned that residents with homes in the area will have to find long-term alternatives to moving back since the water-soaked ground was still shifting and too unstable to live.

The federal government included Niscemi in a state of emergency declaration on Monday for three southern regions hard hit by Cyclone Harry and set aside an initial 100 million euros ($120 million) to be divided among them. Sicilian regional officials estimated on Wednesday the overall damage to Sicily stood at 2 billion euros. Meloni took a helicopter tour of the landslide area and met with local, regional and civil protection officials at the town hall.

She vowed that the initial emergency funding was just the first step in addressing the immediate financial needs of displaced residents and that more was coming. In a statement, her office said the government was committed to helping residents find alternative housing and to restoring road access, utilities and school activities in town.