GROSSETO, Italy — A court convicted the Costa Concordia's commander of the manslaughter deaths of 32 people in the cruise liner's capsizing off the Italian coast and sentenced him Wednesday to some 16 years in prison, blaming him for causing the 2012 shipwreck and for doing what sea captains should never do — abandoning ship while passengers and crew were still aboard.
Francesco Schettino's total prison term broke down this way: 10 years for the deaths of 32 passengers and crew members; five years for causing the shipwreck when he steered too close to Giglio Island, smashing into a rocky reef, one year for abandoning the luxury vessel when hundreds of people were still aboard, and one month for giving false information to maritime authorities about the gravity of the Concordia's collision, which prosecutors said delayed the arrival of help.
The punishment, handed down by a three-judge panel, was 10 years short of what prosecutors had sought, and left some survivors and victims' relatives wondering if justice was done.
"Thirty-two dead. That's about six months for every person who died," said Anne Decre, a Frenchwoman who managed to get aboard a lifeboat before the Concordia's listing made it impossible to lower other lifeboats. Referring to the 16-year prison term, she was one of only a handful of survivors who came to court to hear the verdict.
She is pressing for better safety standards for cruise ships, and like other survivors, recalled how many passengers hadn't received emergency drill practice after starting the Mediterranean cruise.
Keven Rebello's brother, Russel Rebello, was a ship waiter who stayed aboard to lower the last of the lifeboats. His body was found only after the Costa Concordia was towed away from Giglio Island after the ship was set upright in a spectacular engineering,
"What's important is not to forget this affair. Instead, if Schettino ends up in prison, after a while everyone will forget about him, just like they will forget about the victims," Rebello was quoted as saying by the Italian news agency ANSA.
Refusing to comment on the sentence itself, Rebello added: "What matters is that this tragedy serves to make the (cruise) companies and commanders do what's needed so (the tragedy) doesn't repeat itself."