TWO more bodies have been pulled out of tonnes of rubble after a bridge collapsed in Genoa, raising the death toll to at least 39 people.

Civil protection authorities confirmed 39 people died and 15 were injured. Interior minister Matteo Salvini said three children were among the dead.

Rescuers and sniffer dogs are continuing to search through tonnes of concrete slabs and steel for survivors or bodies.

The collapse of the Morandi Bridge sent dozens of cars and three trucks plunging as much as 150ft to the ground.

Many families were on the road ahead of Wednesday’s major summer holiday, Ferragosto.

Two Albanian men were killed in the collapse, named by authorities as Marjus Djerri and Edi Bokrina.

According to the French Foreign Ministry, three French nationals also died, with local media reporting that the two young women and a man from Toulouse had travelled to Italy for a music festival.

Investigators are also working to determine what caused a 260ft long stretch of highway to break off from the 150ft high bridge in the north-western port city.

Italian politicians are trying to find out who to blame for the tragedy.

The Morandi Bridge, built in 1967, was considered innovative in its time for its use of concrete around its cables, but had long been due for an upgrade, especially since the structure saw more heavy traffic than its designers could have envisioned 51 years ago.

One expert in such construction, Antonio Brencich at the University of Genoa, had previously called the bridge “a failure of engineering”.

An unidentified woman who was standing below the bridge told RAI state TV that the structure crumbled as if it were a mound of baking flour.

Engineering experts, noting the bridge’s age, said corrosion and weather could have been factors in its collapse.

The Italian CNR civil engineering society said structures dating from when the Morandi Bridge was built had surpassed their lifespan.

It called for a “Marshall Plan” to repair or replace tens of thousands of Italian bridges and viaducts built in the 1950s and 1960s, adding that simply updating or reinforcing the bridges would be more expensive than destroying and rebuilding them with new technology.

Mehdi Kashani, an associate professor in structural mechanics at the University of Southampton, said pressure from dynamic loads on the bridge, such as heavy traffic or wind, could have led to “fatigue damage”.

Danilo Toninelli, minister of transportation and infrastructure, said there was a plan pending to spend €20 million (£15.7m) on bids for safety work on the bridge.

Toninelli, from the populist 5-Star Movement, threatened in a Facebook post that the state, if necessary, would take direct control of the highways agency if it could not properly care for roads and bridges.

In 2013, some 5-Star MPs had questioned the wisdom of an ambitious and expensive infrastructure overhaul programme as possibly wasteful, according to reports, but a post about that on the Movement’s site was removed on Tuesday after the bridge’s collapse.

Within hours after the collapse, Salvini was vowing not to let European Union spending strictures on Italy, which is laden with public debt, stop any effort to make the country’s infrastructure safe.

Genoa is a flood-prone city, and officials have warned that the debris from the collapse must be removed as soon as possible.

Some of the wreckage landed in a dry riverbed that could potentially flood when the rainy season resumes in a few weeks.

Pope Francis has led prayers for the victims in St Peter’s Square, saying: “I am especially thinking of all those tried by the tragedy in Genoa yesterday, which caused victims and a sense of loss in the population.”

He expressed his “spiritual closeness” to the victims, the injured and their families and the hundreds of people who were forced to flee homes in the area.