The newly appointed Italian culture minister, Dario Franceschini, is already facing a huge challenge: how to save one of the world's most treasured archaeological sites.
He's summoned officials from Pompeii to Rome to report on the state of the site, and explain why the wall of a tomb and part of an arch of the Temple of Venus fell down after days of heavy rain this weekend.
This is not the first time that the site has suffered damage. There was an international outcry in 2010 after a series of wall collapses in Pompeii. The ancient city was completely buried in ash in 79 AD after a volcanic eruption, and rediscovered in the 18th Century.
Critics say that, having survived for two millennia, one of Italy's most popular attractions is now being neglected.
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recently officially chosen (to do a job)
considered to be valuable and important
officially asked to attend a meeting
strong expression of anger about something, made by a group of people
suddenly breaks and falls down (used about people or structures that fall down suddenly)
popular places that people want to visit