Los Angeles Times

Italy marks a decade since Costa Concordia tragedy

- By Trisha Thomas and Nicole Winfield Thomas and Winfield write for the Associated Press and reported from Giglio and Rome, respective­ly.

GIGLIO, Italy — Ten years have passed since the Costa Concordia cruise ship slammed into a reef and capsized off the Tuscan island of Giglio. But for the passengers on board and the residents who welcomed them ashore, the memories of that harrowing, freezing night remain vividly etched into their minds.

The dinner plates that flew off the tables when the rocks first gashed the hull. The blackout after the ship’s engine room flooded and its generators failed. The final mad scramble to evacuate the listing liner and then the extraordin­ary generosity of Giglio islanders who offered shoes, sweatshirt­s and shelter until the sun rose and passengers were ferried to the mainland.

Italy on Thursday is marking the 10th anniversar­y of the Concordia disaster with a daylong commemorat­ion that will end with a candlelit vigil near the moment the ship hit the reef: 9:45 p.m. on Jan. 13, 2012. The events will honor the 32 people who died that night and the 4,200 survivors, but also the residents of Giglio, who took in passengers and crew and then lived with the Concordia’s wrecked carcass off their shore for two more years before it was righted and hauled away for scrap.

“For us islanders, when we remember some event, we always refer to whether it was before or after the Concordia,” said Matteo Coppa, who was 23 and fishing on the jetty when the darkened Concordia listed toward shore and then collapsed onto its side in the water.

“I imagine it like a nail stuck to the wall that marks that date, as a before and after,” he said, recounting how he joined the rescue effort that night, helping pull ashore the dazed, injured and freezing passengers from lifeboats.

The sad anniversar­y comes as the cruise industry, shut down in much of the world for months because of the COVID-19 pandemic, is once again in the spotlight because of outbreaks that threaten passenger safety. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control last month warned people against going on cruises, regardless of their vaccinatio­n status.

For Concordia survivor Georgia Ananias, the coronaviru­s infections are just the latest evidence that passenger safety still isn’t a top priority for the cruise ship industry. Passengers aboard the Concordia were largely left on their own to find life jackets and a functionin­g lifeboat after the captain steered the ship close too shore in a stunt. He then delayed an evacuation order until it was too late, with lifeboats unable to lower because the ship was listing too heavily.

“I always said this will not define me, but you have no choice,” Ananias said in an interview from her home in Los Angeles. “We all suffer from PTSD. We had a lot of guilt that we survived and 32 other people died.”

Prosecutor­s blamed the delayed evacuation order and conflictin­g instructio­ns given by crew for the chaos that ensued as passengers scrambled to get off the ship. The captain, Francesco Schettino, is serving a 16-year prison sentence for manslaught­er, causing a shipwreck and abandoning a ship before all the passengers and crew had evacuated.

Ananias and her family declined Costa’s initial $14,500 compensati­on offered to each passenger and sued Costa, a unit of U.S.based Carnival Corp., to try to cover the cost of their medical bills and therapy for post-traumatic stress. But after eight years in the U.S. and then Italian court system, they lost their case.

“I think people need to be aware that when you go on a cruise, that if there is a problem, you will not have the justice that you may be used to in the country in which you are living,” said Ananias, who went on to become a top official in the Internatio­nal Cruise Victims associatio­n, an advocacy group that lobbies to improve safety aboard ships and increase transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the industry.

Costa didn’t respond to emails seeking comment on the anniversar­y.

Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Assn., the world’s largest cruise industry trade associatio­n, stressed in a statement to the Associated Press that passenger and crew safety were the industry’s top priorities and that cruising remains one of the safest vacation experience­s.

“Our thoughts continue to be with the victims of the Concordia tragedy and their families on this sad anniversar­y,” the trade group said. It said it has worked over the last 10 years with the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on and the maritime industry to “drive a safety culture that is based on continuous improvemen­t.”

For Giglio Mayor Sergio Ortelli, the memories of that night run the gamut: the horror of seeing the capsized ship, the scramble to coordinate rescue services on shore, the recovery of the first bodies and then the pride that islanders rose to the occasion to aid survivors.

Ortelli was later on hand when, in September 2013, the 115,000-ton, 1,000-foot-long ship was righted vertically off its seabed graveyard in a feat of engineerin­g. But the night of the disaster, a Friday the 13th, remains seared in his memory.

“It was a night that, in addition to being a tragedy, had a beautiful side because the response of the people was a spontaneou­s gesture that was appreciate­d around the world,” he said.

 ?? Giuseppe Modesti Associated Press ?? I TA LY will honor the cruise victims and survivors and Giglio residents who offered aid on Jan. 13, 2012.
Giuseppe Modesti Associated Press I TA LY will honor the cruise victims and survivors and Giglio residents who offered aid on Jan. 13, 2012.

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