‘Captain Coward crashed luxury liner in 2010’

The capsized Costa Concordia cruise ship lies on its side after being holed by a rock off the west coast of Italy, at Giglio island. Divers and other rescuers were painstakingly checking thousands of cabins on the Italian liner for 15 people still unaccounted for after the huge vessel foundered and keeled over.

The capsized Costa Concordia cruise ship lies on its side after being holed by a rock off the west coast of Italy, at Giglio island. Divers and other rescuers were painstakingly checking thousands of cabins on the Italian liner for 15 people still unaccounted for after the huge vessel foundered and keeled over.

Published Mar 2, 2012

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The captain of a tragedy-struck Italian cruise ship had crashed a luxury liner before while sailing too fast in a German port, according to leaks from an investigation into the disaster published on Friday.

Captain Francesco Schettino “manoeuvred at a speed of 7.7 to 7.9 knots during entry into the port of Warnemunde, causing damage to the Aida Blu cruise ship,” his employer notified him in a letter published by La Stampa daily, referring to an incident in June 2010.

Schettino responded in writing saying: “I did not know the speed limit and have not received notification of an infraction from the relevant authorities.” He said there were “probably other factors” behind the accident.

Schettino has been accused of manslaughter and of abandoning ship before all the passengers were evacuated after the Costa Concordia crashed into the Italian island of Giglio on January 13 with the loss of 32 lives.

At the time of the incident in Germany, he was captain of the Costa Atlantica - another ship from the fleet of Costa Crociere, Europe's biggest cruise operator based in the port of Genoa in northern Italy.

Schettino, who has been dubbed “Captain Coward” by the tabloid press, is one of nine people under investigation for the Costa Concordia disaster including three Costa Crociere executives and five other crew members.

Leaked documents published on Thursday contained claims of a hard-partying atmosphere on board two Costa Crociere ships including the Costa Concordia, with officers seen snorting cocaine and getting drunk on a regular basis. - AFP

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