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‘Italy’s most hated man’ on trial over ship wreck

The trial of Italy's Costa Concordia cruise ship captain Francesco Schettino is set to get under way on Wednesday, with survivors of the 2012 nighttime disaster and relatives of the 32 victims expected to attend.

'Italy's most hated man' on trial over ship wreck
The trial of cruise ship captain Francesco Schettino begins on Wednesday. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP.

Schettino, dubbed "Italy's most hated man" by tabloids after the luxurious Costa Concordia spectacularly crashed into rocks off Giglio island, is accused of multiple manslaughter, abandoning ship and causing environmental damage.

His trial officially began last week, but was immediately postponed due to a lawyers' strike.

Schettino was nicknamed "Captain Coward" for abandoning ship while terrified people were trapped aboard and then sobbing in the arms of the
ship's chaplain.

With his slicked-back hair and macho swagger, the 52-year-old has been depicted as a blackguard who was showing off for a blonde female guest when he performed a risky manoeuvre to "salute" the island which ended in tragedy.

But some lawyers have been saying he should not be the sole defendant and Costa Crociere, Europe's biggest cruise operator, should share the blame. Up to 450 witnesses and 250 plaintiffs could be called during the trial.

Schettino's lawyers, Domenico and Francesco Pepe, have called 100 witnesses and pledged to show that "no single person was responsible" for the disaster.

They plan to probe management at ship owner Costa Crociere, materials used to build the ship, and a malfunction of emergency doors and back-up generators.

Four other people charged, including the ship's Indonesian helmsman, have entered plea bargains to be ruled on in a separate hearing on July 20th.

Costa earlier admitted limited responsibility as Schettino's employer and was ordered to pay €1.0 million in a controversial ruling that has excluded it from criminal proceedings.

The prosecution has called 347 witnesses including Domnica Cemortan, a young Moldovan woman who was in Schettino's company at the time of impact and was rumoured to have been having an affair with the medallion-wearing captain.

The Concordia crashed as many of the 4,229 people from 70 countries on board were sitting down to dinner, and a delayed and chaotic evacuation saw some desperately throw themselves overboard into the dark sea as lifeboats ran out.

The ship still lies beached on its side, its rusting frame dwarfed by towering blue cranes and a floating hotel for divers and salvage workers.

The vessel is due to be re-floated in an unprecedented operation, but technical difficulties have repeatedly hampered the salvage.

Giglio's mayor Sergio Ortelli said that nerves on the island were strained.

"The patience of the inhabitants has been stretched to the limit. A third summer season ruined by the salvage operation is unacceptable," he said.

As he leaned on the harbour wall in the sun, fisherman Umberto Castelli said the island was overwhelmed by day-trippers who came just to gawk at the
ship.

"I'm sick to death of the whole thing: sick of the boat, the journalists, the tragedy tourists," he said with a grimace, while 40-year-old waitress

Giovanni said: "I don't believe in the salvage anymore. They've been mocking us."

"The ship is rotten. As soon as they touch it, it'll break up," she said.

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Watch: Norwegian rescue services evacuate crew from ship adrift at sea

A Dutch cargo ship was adrift in the Norwegian Sea on Tuesday after it was evacuated in dramatic fashion in rough seas, Norway's maritime authorities said.

Watch: Norwegian rescue services evacuate crew from ship adrift at sea
JRRC South Norway / AFP

The “Eemslift Hendrika” made a distress call Monday, reporting a heavy list after stormy weather displaced some of its cargo. 

The 12 crew members were evacuated in two stages later the same day by Norwegian rescue services: the first eight were airlifted from the deck of the cargo ship while the last four had to jump into the water.

Footage from the Norwegian authorities shows a man in an orange survival suit throwing himself into the rough sea off the stern of the ship.
The ship also suffered an engine failure and then began drifting towards to the Norwegian coastline.

On Tuesday morning it was about 130 kilometres (80 miles) northwest of the port city of Ålesund.

“The ship is drifting with a large list (between 40 and 50 degrees), so there is a risk that it will capsize,” Hans-Petter Mortensholm, head of the Norwegian Coastal Administration (Kystverket) told AFP.

“Our main priority is to try to stabilise it so that it does not sink, and so that it does not leak fuel oil into the sea,” he added.
The cargo ship contains 350 cubic metres of heavy fuel oil, 75 cubic metres of diesel and 10m3 of lubricating oil.

A Norwegian Coast Guard vessel was en route to the ship on Tuesday morning.

The operator of the vessel has also called in the Dutch company Smit Salvage, which was involved in the refloating of the Ever Given in the Suez Canal last week.

Weather conditions were “extremely bad” with waves of 10 to 15 metres, complicating the situation but a lull was expected in the afternoon, according to Kystverket.

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