A worker who was trapped after part of a medieval tower collapsed in the heart of Rome, has died, according to hospital officials.
Octay Stroici, 66, was pulled free at 23:00 local time (22:00 GMT), nearly twelve hours after a section of the Torre dei Conti, on the edge of the famous Roman Forum and close to the Colosseum, gave way and trapped him beneath.
His heart stopped in the ambulance, and doctors at the hospital he was rushed to were unable to save him.
The Romanian foreign ministry said Stroici was a Romanian national, as was another worker among three others pulled from the rubble.

Stroici’s rescue was initially described as an exceptional feat by firefighters who had worked late into the night. Rescue teams used drones and rubble clearers to try to reach him, despite the risk that the fragile tower could collapse further.
He had been conscious and talking to the emergency workers throughout the rescue. His wife was also at the scene.
Stroici had been carrying out conservation work on the medieval tower just off Rome’s busy Via dei Fori Imperiali and close to the Forum itself, one of this city’s busiest tourist sites. This particular building had been empty and abandoned for many years.
The Rome Prosecutor’s Office has opened an investigation into the incident.
Part of the structure collapsed at about 11:20 on Monday and efforts to rescue Stroici were interrupted when a second section of the 29m (90ft) high tower began crumbling again about 90 minutes later, as bricks rained down, creating a huge cloud of dust.
Rome prefect Lamberto Gianninihad described it as a “very complex situation”. After the initial collapse he said firefighters had “put up some protection” around the trapped man, so that when the second collapse happened, “they obviously shielded him”.
He added that the rescue was a long operation due to having to “mitigate… the enormous risks faced by the people trying to carry out the rescue”.
One firefighter was taken to hospital with an eye problem, according to Italian reports, but the rest were unharmed, eventually resuming their search for the man.

A police chief said there was no imminent danger that the tower would disintegrate.
“My thoughts and deepest sympathies go out to the person currently fighting for his life beneath the rubble, and to his family, for whom I sincerely hope that this tragedy finds a positive outcome,” wrote Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on X before the rescue was complete.
Another worker, 67-year-old Ottaviano, who was inside at the time of the collapse but escaped from a balcony uninjured, told the AFP news agency: “It was not safe. I just want to go home.”
Rome’s mayor and Italy’s culture minister visited the scene.
The 13th Century tower was built by Pope Innocent III as a residence for his brother.
It is separated from the main visitors’ area of the Roman Forum by a road. The streets all around have been taped off by police as a precaution.


