Concordia captain's stunt blamed for cruise wreck - Action News
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Concordia captain's stunt blamed for cruise wreck

A Fifth Estate report pieces together the details of the Costa Concordia disaster, with exclusive footage of passengers' chaotic evacuation and a reconstruction of the captain's risky manoeuvre, which took the cruise ship off course and ran it aground off the coast of Italy.

Dangerous manoeuvre possibly linked to rivalry between captains, Fifth Estate report reveals

Costa Concordia Survivor Footage

13 years ago
Duration 1:42
Footage captured by survivors David and Denise Saba of Miami, Florida. They were on their honeymoon aboard the Costa Concordia in the dining room when the ship struck a rock.

The dangerous manoeuvrethat caused theCosta Concordia cruise shipto crash into rocks off the shore of the Italian island of Giglio last month was likely the result of a rivalry between its captain and that of anothership to see who could get closest to the island when sounding the customary salute that vessels give when passing shore.

Concordia's captain, Francesco Schettino, had sent an email just weeksbefore the Jan. 13disaster to another captain who had managed tosound his ship's horn fromcloser than the eight kilometres considered safe.

In that email, Schettino vowed to pull the same stunt and do it better, according to Italian investigative journalist Carlo Bonini, one of several people interviewed in a special report on the wreck of the Concordia that will air Friday night onTheFifth Estate.

Italian journalist Carlo Bonini, who has tried to reconstruct the events leading up to the capsizing of the Concordia. (Joe Passaretti/CBC)

"So, I think it wasthis sort of a challenge among captains, a sort of a secret challenge among captains," Bonini told the Fifth Estate's Bob McKeown.

Bonini learned of the captain'sboast while investigating the events that led up to the running aground of theConcordia, which resulted in the deaths of at least 17 of the 4,200 crew and passengers on board (another 16 people are still missing and presumed dead).

TheFifth Estate report features interviews andexclusive videosfrom some of those passengers, taken as they scrambled to get off the capsizing Concordia, as well as interviews with marine expertsandkey figuresinvolved in the rescue operation.

In the report, Bonini describes how itmay have beenSchettino's challenge to the other captainthat ledhim to, without the knowledge of the ship's passengers,change the Concordia's course to pass about 800 metres from shore even though it was supposed to be heading farther out to sea.

"No one among his officers dared to say, 'This is not safe'," Bonini told the Fifth Estate.

Island's deputy mayor leads rescue

Schettino could have still salvaged the situation had he slowed down and turned the vessel parallel to the coast,said Capt. John Konrad, an experiencedmaster mariner who reconstructed the Concordia's course for the Fifth Estate.

But Schettino was distracted witnesses say he was on the bridge of the ship with a young woman he had been dining with earlier, along withhis fellow officers, and he was talking on the phone. That may have been what caused him to lose track of how close the ship was to the rocks and keep going full speed ahead,causing the stern to smash into an outcrop of rocks less than a ship's length off shore (the Concordia is 290 metres long).

The initial confusion and then, more than an hour after the crash, the chaos that ensued when the captain finally made theannouncement to abandon ship is vividly described in the Fifth Estate report by those who lived through it, including ship doctor Gianluca Marino-Cosentino, who like the rest of the Concordia's crew and passengers, was kept in the dark about what had really happened to the ship.

Mario Pellegrino, deputy mayor of the island of Giglio, off Italy's Tuscan coast. He was among the first on the scene of the Concordia accident and among the last to leave the capsized ship. (Joe Passaretti/CBC)

"I never seen before Titanic, but we live the Titanic situation," Marino-Cosentino told the Fifth Estate. "Because I saw the ship go on left, on right. Everything goes. People fall down, people cut, people destroyed, people dead."

Giglio's deputy mayor, Mario Pellegrino,also witnessed themayhem firsthand. Heboarded the first lifeboat that arrived on his island as it headed back to the Concordia to pick up more passengers. When he arrived at the cruise ship,he found plenty of panicked passengers scrambling for lifeboats but no senior officers, so he, one junior officerand the ship's stewards, waiters and other staff led the evacuation.

"In all the panic that ensued, no one asked about the captain," Pellegrino told the Fifth Estate. "It was only when we got off the ship that the question was raised: where was he?"

According to the timeline Bonini has assembled based on interviews with witnesses, Schettino and three first officers left thecruise ship in a lifeboatshortly after the "abandon ship" order was given.

The Fifth Estate report "The Wreck of the Costa Concordia" airs Friday at 9 p.m./9:30 p.m. NTon CBC-TV.