Malta Independent

Court allows MV Lifeline captain to visit his elderly mother in Germany

-

The captain of the MV Lifeline, Claus Peter Reisch, has been given permission by the court to travel to Germany to visit his elderly mother.

Reisch, 57, has been charged with entering Maltese waters without permission and with an irregularl­y registered vessel.

The ship was impounded after the Maltese government allowed it to disembark 233 migrants in Malta following a standoff with Italy. Eight other countries eventually agreed to share the migrants with Malta.

The decree was handed down this morning by Magistrate Joe Mifsud, who is hearing the case.

Reisch had initially been granted bail but was told to stay in Malta until the case was heard. In the last sitting, he had asked the court to allow him to visit his 93-year-old mother.

The magistrate, who yesterday carried out an on-site inspection of the vessel in Senglea, today accepted the captain’s request.

The magistrate also slammed media outlets for misleading the public on the MV Lifeline case. “Things are being reported as facts, when they were comments which did not form part of the evidence which the court will be deciding on,” said Magistrate Joe Mifsud yesterday morning.

It wasn’t true that the court had refused a request by defence lawyers Cedric Mifsud, Neil Falzon and Gianluca Cappitta for proceeding­s to be held in English, as had been reported, he said. “It was a person who identified himself as an Italian lawyer who stood up and asked for a translatio­n. He has no right of audience in these proceeding­s. The court… followed the dispositio­ns of the Judicial Proceeding­s (Use of the English Language) Act and subarticle (2) of Section 516 of the Criminal Code.”

Tuesday’s sitting was held on board the Lifeline itself, after the magistrate carried out a site visit as part of his inquiry. At the same time, an applicatio­n presented by Captain Claus-Peter Reisch in which he asked to be allowed bail to visit his elderly mother was discussed.

“This was all agreed to between the defence and the prosecutio­n, and co-ordinated with Captain Reisch,” explained the magistrate, clarifying that only court experts and one Dutch shipping registrar representa­tive were still to testify.

“And if some members of the crew of the MV Lifeline, as reported in the Shift News went to court in Valletta for the sitting, it was because of a lack of communicat­ion between them and their colleagues, among them Claus-Peter Reisch,” he said, pointedly.

The captain had been informed of the arrangemen­ts made to facilitate those involved.

The magistrate ended with a veiled threat to those who misreprese­nt his words, warning that the Press Act prohibited legal action being taken against publicatio­ns on court proceeding­s “as long as the reports are faithful accounts of the proceeding­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta