Cruise captain ‘committed errors’ say ship’s owners

Still following this week’s big story, the capsizing of the cruise ship Costa Concordia off the coast of Italy on Friday evening, the big question being asked is how the blazes did a modern cruise ship just six years old managed to run around?

The company operating the cruise ship says the captain may have “committed errors”. He appears to have sailed too close to land and not to have followed the company’s emergency procedures, Costa Crociere said in a statement.

Capt Francesco Schettino is suspected of manslaughter, but denies wrongdoing. At least six people have died, but about 15 remain unaccounted for and divers are trying to find more survivors.

“It seems that the commander made errors of judgement that had serious consequences,” Costa Crociere said.

How the Costa Concordia would've looked right before she struck the submerged rocks

“The route followed by the ship turned out to be too close to the coast, and it seems that his decision in handling the emergency didn’t follow Costa Crociere’s procedures which are in line, and in some cases, go beyond, international standards,” the statement added.

The Costa Concordia is lying on its side just metres off the Tuscan island of Giglio.

Capt Schettino has been detained on suspicion of manslaughter. The chief prosecutor said the vessel had “very ineptly got close to Giglio”. But Capt Schettino denied any wrongdoing, saying the rocks it hit were not marked on his nautical chart.

“We should have had deep water beneath us,” he told Italian TV. “We were about 300 metres (1,000ft) from the rocks more or less. We shouldn’t have hit anything.”

He also denied claims by prosecutors that he left the Costa Concordia before evacuation was complete. “We were the last to leave the ship,” Capt Schettino said.

The ship was very modern with a luxury interior offering restuarants, bars and a casino

There have been suggestions in Italian media that he may have steered his vessel close to Giglio in order to put on a show for residents of the island. The 52-year-old captain has worked for Costa Crociere for 11 years. The company said he joined the company in 2002 as an official in charge of security.

He was made captain in 2006, having been the ship’s second-in-command. Like all captains in the fleet he took part in a continuous programme of training and passed all the required checks, Costa Crociere said. First officer Ciro Ambrosio has also been detained.

Carnival, which owns Costa Crociere, said it expected to lose $95m (£62m; €75m) this year for “loss of use” of the ship. Rescue crews found the body of a male in a corridor of the vessel early on Monday. Officials said he was probably a passenger, based on the type of life jacket he was wearing.

On Sunday, emergency teams recovered the bodies of two elderly men trapped in a flooded section of the partially submerged Costa Concordia. The bodies are being taken to the mainland for identification.

The Concordia had 17 decks, was 290 metres long and cost £372million to build

The ship, carrying more than 4,200 people, was on the first night of a Mediterranean cruise when it ran aground in calm conditions. However, poor weather is hampering the search as teams scour the hundreds of submerged cabins and other rooms.

“We are going to all the ship’s cabins looking for any signs of life, or people shouting or any noises,” said Italian interior ministry spokesman, Francesco Paulo Tronca.

“It’s a very difficult operation. We are talking about hundreds and hundreds of cabins on many different decks.”

Three survivors were found on Sunday. Teams working above the waterline rescued an Italian man – a senior member of the ship’s crew – who had suffered a severe leg injury. He was placed on a stretcher and winched up to a rescue helicopter.

How the Concordia looks today, sitting just metres off sola del Giglio in the Mediterranean

Earlier, a Korean couple who were on their honeymoon were discovered trapped in a cabin. They were brought ashore, dazed but unhurt. On Saturday, officials said two French passengers and a Peruvian crew member had died and another 30 people had been injured.

Italian, German, French and British nationals were among the 3,200 passengers on board. There were also 1,000 crew.

The president of Costa Crociere, Gianni Onorato, said the company would “be working in full transparency with Italian authorities” to understand the causes of the disaster.

Mr Onorato said normal lifeboat evacuation had become “almost impossible” because the ship had listed so quickly. Some passengers had to swim to Giglio.

The survivors have been taken by ferry from Giglio to Porta San Stefano, about 25km (15 miles) away on the mainland. Some described scenes of chaos, and said the crew had not carried out an evacuation drill by the time disaster struck.

Geoffrey Salter

Related stories
Couple rescued from submerged Costa Concordia
Disney cruise worker still missing
Cruise ship smashed by giant wave
Drunk man drops anchor of moving cruise ship
Cruise ship chaos off Kiwi coast

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply