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Editorial Board
January 1, 2021 09:57
He was wounded in the head, during the New Year’s Eve celebrations, by a metal body that got caught between his forehead and nose: at first it was thought of a stray bullet, but later investigations point more to a splinter, fruit of the explosion of an explosion. The 52-year-old woman, injured in Mugnano (Naples), he was first medicated at the Giugliano hospital and then transferred to Cardarelli. The X-ray shows that the splinter stuck in the nose is 17 millimeters long, too big for a shot; however, it could have had very serious consequences if it had penetrated another point of the head. The woman, as reconstructed by the local police station, was hit by the splinter while she was on the street to deposit the garbage. Subsequently, the metal body will be removed by means of a surgical intervention.
In Naples there was a sharp decline in the number of injured for New Year’s Eve, which was eight, three in the capital and five in the province, while last year there were 48. Among the injured, all adults, no one is in danger of death. Among the reports collected by the Neapolitan police headquarters at night is that of a 30-year-old from Camposano (Naples), injured in the hand while around 4 in the morning he was picking up unexploded firecrackers in the street. It is not serious, but you will be reported for violation of the curfew.
The blow of the new year was greeted by at least forty-five minutes of fireworks, in the capital and in the interior. A party with a large volume of barrels, in which explosions of many high-potential bombs were heard and uncautious behavior was recorded, such as rocket batteries that were fired for half an hour from the patio of a condominium in viale Colli Aminei , in Naples, a few centimeters from the garbage containers, with a clear risk of fire. Of the eight wounded registered between the capital and the province, six were treated and discharged. The balance of injured, however, says that in the end the desire to celebrate without unnecessary risks prevailed, with the predominant use of legal fires.