Defiant Concordia skipper vows to clear his name

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AFP Rome
Last Updated : Feb 12 2015 | 6:50 PM IST
Costa Concordia captain Francesco Schettino has vowed that he will never accept his conviction for abandoning ship on the night of the 2012 cruise ship disaster.
Schettino, 54, was sentenced today to 16 years in prison for multiple manslaughter, causing a maritime accident and for leaving his boat before all of the passengers and crew had been evacuated.
"I will fight for ever to prove that I did not abandon the Costa Concordia," Schettino said in his first reaction to the verdict at the end of his 19-month trial.
Despite conviction, Schettino was still a free man on today and will remain so pending at least one and likely two appeals which could take years.
Italy's crammed jails and generous parole system mean it is unlikely he will ever serve anything like 16 years in jail for his role in a disaster that left 32 people dead.
The violation of the ancient code of the sea which states a captain must be the last man off a sinking ship only accounted for one year of the sentence handed down yesterday by a three-judge panel in the Tuscan town of Grosseto.
But the accusation that he behaved in a cowardly and unprofessional way in the chaotic aftermath of the Concordia smashing into underwater rocks off the island of Giglio appears to have been the one that hurt the Naples-born career seaman the most.
The charge was instrumental in turning Schettino into a reviled figure, with the Italian media's monicker for him, "Captain Coward", picked up around the world and his defence that he "fell" into a lifeboat widely ridiculed.
Schettino was not in court for the verdict, having broken down in tears during his final plea earlier in the day.
Speaking to Italian reporters later, he said he was disappointed with the guilty verdict but would not comment on the more serious charges until he had read the judges' motivations.
Schettino was given 10 years for manslaughter and five for causing a disaster that led to the biggest salvage operation in maritime history.
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First Published: Feb 12 2015 | 6:50 PM IST

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