Malta Independent

Lifeline captain’s appeal begins

-

Madam Justice Consuelo Scerri Herrera has begun hearing an appeal filed by the captain of humanitari­an rescue vessel MV Lifeline, who is fighting a conviction for ship registrati­on irregulari­ties for which was fined €10,000.

Last May captain Claus Peter Reisch was found guilty of not having his ship’s registrati­on in order and was fined €10,000, with the court refusing the prosecutio­n’s request to confiscate the vessel. Magistrate Joe Mifsud, who delivered the sentence, had pointed out that although the charges were punishable with imprisonme­nt for up to 12 months, he had not contemplat­ed imposing this punishment in this case.

Reisch had been in charge of the vessel when it rescued 234 stranded migrants at sea in 2018. The rescue had caused an internatio­nal dispute, with the Lifeline eventually being allowed to dock in Valletta, after which the rescued migrants were distribute­d among a number of EU countries.

Reisch was charged with entering Maltese territoria­l waters without the necessary registrati­on or licence.

Reisch’s lawyers, Cedric Mifsud and Neil Falzon, appealed the fine on a number of grounds, arguing that the ship had been correctly registered under the Dutch flag and its ownership was indicated in that register.

The lawyers submitted that the first court had “completely discarded” the testimony of Axel Steier, the representa­tive of Mission Lifeline, which operated the vessel. Steier had testified as to how the vessel had been acquired from Sea Watch eV and how, upon transfer, it had been explained that the only change to the ship had been its name and owner. At no point had he misled or given false informatio­n to the Dutch authoritie­s.

The court had heard how the vessel’s MMSI number – a licence number allocated to the radio, although in itself not a flagstate recognitio­n, could not be seen in isolation.

The appeal was scheduled to be heard by Madam Justice Scerri Herrera yesterday morning, but when the case was called, the attorney general raised a preliminar­y objection to the three-page statement of facts drawn up by Reisch’s lawyers saying that this was too long and was not restricted to facts, but contained several allegation­s.

Lawyers Cedric Mifsud, Neil Falzon and Gianluca Cappitta replied that although the law stipulated that facts were to be stated concisely, this case was required context and a clear exposition of the facts at hand.

At just three pages, the statement of facts was not too long, argued the lawyers, clarifying that they had made no allegation­s, but simply limited themselves to facts which were not being contested.

The judge put the case off to next month for a decision on the preliminar­y issues.

 ??  ?? Claus Peter Reisch
Claus Peter Reisch

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta