The Borneo Post

Verdict expected in deadly Italy shipwreck trial

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CATANIA, Italy: Italian judges are to rule yesterday whether the alleged captain of a migrant boat that sank in 2015, killing up to 900 people, is responsibl­e for the Mediterran­ean's worst disaster since World War II.

Prosecutor­s in the Sicilian port city of Catania have called for Tunisian Mohammed Ali Malek to serve 18 years for multiple manslaught­er, human traffickin­g and causing the tragedy after the packed boat capsized after colliding with a freighter coming to its aid.

They have also demanded he pay three million euros ( US$ 3.18 million) in compensati­on for a tragedy that saw Italian forensic scientists spend months sorting through decomposed body parts to count the victims.

Syrian Mahmoud Bikhit, the alleged first mate, faces six years behind bars for his role in the tragedy off the coast of Libya.

Both have claimed they were simple migrants and had been made to steer the boat by the real trafficker­s.

But survivors told investigat­ors that Malek was the captain and that it was his lack of sailing skills that caused the deadly collision.

The boat was carrying people largely from The Gambia, Senegal and Mali, as well as Bangladesh, the Ivory Coast and Ethiopia. Only 28 survived.

Up to 900 people were packed into the 27-metre boat when it left Libya, according to forensic scientists who spent months examining body bags only to discover many contained the remains of more than one person.

Firefighte­rs who recovered the mangled bodies from the rotting ship said they had been “packed in like on the trains for Auschwitz”.

The Sicilian court will hear from a survivor who lost relatives on the night of the April 18-19 wreck before the prosecutio­n and defence give their closing arguments.

The judges will then retire to consider the verdict, which is expected to be given at around 1200 GMT.

The vessel sank in pitch darkness after running into the Portuguese freighter King Jacob which had raced to its rescue, the collision sending its passengers over to one side and causing the vessel to tip over.

Thefreight­er'scaptain, Abdullah Ambrousi, said he saw the migrant boat sailing erraticall­y and cut the freighter's engines to avoid a crash, but the smaller vessel speed up and rammed into the King Jacob.

Malek has claimed the real captain died in the wreck and he is being scapegoate­d by the other survivors because he is Tunisian. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a man now identified as Mohammed Ali Malek (centre) seated on board the Italian Coast Guard vessel Bruno Gregoretti, at Boiler Wharf, Senglea in Malta, as rescuers evacuate the body of a victim. — AFP photo
File photo shows a man now identified as Mohammed Ali Malek (centre) seated on board the Italian Coast Guard vessel Bruno Gregoretti, at Boiler Wharf, Senglea in Malta, as rescuers evacuate the body of a victim. — AFP photo

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