Sicily yacht sinking updates: trapped passengers ‘may have died on Bayesian because they were asleep’ | Italy


Passengers may died because they were asleep, prosecutor says

Passengers may not have been able to escape from the yacht because they were asleep, Raffaele Cammarano, the prosecutor of the case has said.

Rear Admiral Raffaele Macauda (right) speaking during a press conference
Rear Admiral Raffaele Macauda (right) speaking during a press conference Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA

He suggested the victim “were asleep whereas the others weren’t”.

He was asked if there was anyone at the time available to alert them.

Through a translation of the conference Mr Cammarano said: “That is precisely what we are trying to ascertain from the statements made during the interrogation of the survivors – an essential point in the inquiry obviously.”

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Key events

More now from the press conference, at which officials were asked about whether there was a black box or other safety equipment on board the ship.

“We haven’t got exact information about the black box,” Mr Cammarano said.

“It was extremely difficult to get inside some of the cabins and the yacht itself.

“The first phase of this inquiry will certainly concentrate on confirming the presence of such things.

“We can’t reveal anything at this stage but the facts will be confirmed by the later search amongst the wreckage.”

Who died in the sinking?

Seven people are now confirmed to have died when the Bayesian sank.

The highest-profile victim was British entrepreneur Mike Lynch, who founded a number of technology companies.

Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter Hannah, who had just won a place to study English Literature at the University of Oxford, also died.

The chair of Morgan Stanley International, Jonathan Bloomer, and his wife, Judy, were both killed, as were a lawyer for Clifford Chance, Chris Morvillo, his wife, Neda, and the yacht’s chef, Recaldo Thomas.

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Nothing to suggest ‘extreme situation’ would arise, says coastguard

The weather in the hours before the sinking was “abnormal” but there was nothing to suggest such an “extreme situation” would arise, Mr Macauda said.

“As you can see from the internet, there were forecasts [for] winds of a strength of five from the north-west and the west and a storm alert,” he said.

“But there wasn’t an alert of a tornado.

“Given that the conditions were such, there wasn’t anything to suggest there could be an extreme situation arising.

“There are vessels that can monitor these events and one would’ve thought the captain would’ve taken precautions.”

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Asked how the crew had managed to survived when none of the passengers did, Mr Cammarano said the sinking happened “really, really suddenly”.

“We have tried to find out maximum information possible from the crew members or the survivors,” he said.

“All I would say is that the incident happened really, really suddenly.

“The inquiry will begin with the facts of the shipwreck. That is all I can say at the moment.”

Rear Admiral Raffaele Macauda, maritime director of western Sicily, speaking at the press conference. Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA

It is not yet clear how long it will take for the wreckage of the yacht to be recovered from the ocean floor, the maritime director for western Sicily said at the press conference.

Rear Admiral Raffaele Macauda said the water in the area where the vessel sank is around 50m deep and that it would be the responsibility of its owners to retrieve it.

“Everything depends on the availability of the owners and the timeframe of the retrieval of the wreck,” he said.

“Of course all that has to be submitted to the port authorities and in parallel of course there will be the inquiry results and it’s only really then that we will be able to authorise the operation.

“But the preliminary phase which we requested was to retrieve the wreck and after that we can proceed with the rest.”

He added that the recovery of the boat’s fuel tanks would be a priority because of their possible environmental impact.

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Six of the bodies recovered from the wreck were found in cabins on the left side of yacht, according to the chief of the Palermo fire service.

Officials said the back of the vessel sank before the whole thing rolled onto its right side.

“The yacht obviously pinned to the right and obviously the [people] tried to go on the other side and then took refuge in their cabins,” said Girolamo Bentivoglio, according to a translation provided by the BBC.

“We found four or five bodies in the cabin on the left and there was another one in the third cabin on the left too, and obviously they were in the higher part of the wreck.”

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Passengers may died because they were asleep, prosecutor says

Passengers may not have been able to escape from the yacht because they were asleep, Raffaele Cammarano, the prosecutor of the case has said.

Rear Admiral Raffaele Macauda (right) speaking during a press conference Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA

He suggested the victim “were asleep whereas the others weren’t”.

He was asked if there was anyone at the time available to alert them.

Through a translation of the conference Mr Cammarano said: “That is precisely what we are trying to ascertain from the statements made during the interrogation of the survivors – an essential point in the inquiry obviously.”

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Italian prosecutors open manslaughter investigation

Good morning and welcome to our coverage of the ongoing investigation into the sinking of the Bayesian superyacht off the coast of Sicily.

We know now an manslaughter investigation has been opened into the deaths of seven people, including the British technology tycoon Mike Lynch and his daughter Hannah.

A press conference is taking place in Sicily, led by public prosecutor Ambrogio Cartosio.

More on this investigation below.

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