
Greek court charges 17 coast guard officers over 2023 migrant shipwreck, say sources
ATHENS, May 23 (Reuters) - A Greek naval court has charged 17 coast guard officers over one of the Mediterranean's worst shipwrecks two years ago, in which hundreds of people are believed to have drowned, three sources said on Friday.
The shipwreck of an overloaded migrant boat in international waters off the southwestern Greek town of Pylos on June 14, 2023, sent shockwaves across Europe and beyond. The naval court is still investigating the circumstances around the incident.
A coast guard vessel had been monitoring the boat, named Adriana, for 15 hours before it capsized and sank. It had left Libya for Italy with about 750 people on board. Only 104 of them are known to have survived.
Greek coast guard authorities have repeatedly denied any wrongdoing over the handling of the case.
Three legal sources said the 17 coast guard officers would be summoned by a judge to respond to accusations ranging from obstructing transport to causing or helping cause a shipwreck.
Contacted by Reuters, a Greek coast guard official said the service had not been officially informed about the charges and had asked to be briefed by the naval court.
Greece's judicial system has several preparatory stages and the compilation of charges does not necessarily mean that an individual will face trial.
Human rights activists and other protesters plan rallies across Greece on June 21 to mark the second anniversary of the Pylos shipwreck.
In February, the Greek Ombudsman recommended disciplinary action against eight coast guard officers, the first national probe into the incident to conclude.
Greece says that the coast guard operates with respect to human rights and that it has rescued more than 250,000 people since 2015, when the country was at the frontline of Europe's migration crisis.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
British father's six-year rape ordeal finally ends as he is cleared of attacking US teen in Greece and his lawyer reveals devastating effect the false claim had on his life
A British father has been cleared of raping an American teenager outside the bar he worked at in Greece in a six-year-long legal battle that lost him his wife. The 35-year-old DJ had been clashing with a 19-year-old teen in court since 2019 after she said he assaulted her while she was 'blind' drunk in Crete. The father-of-six insisted they had consensual sex - which a court in Heraklion believed today due to doubt over the girl's statement. The young woman was noticeably absent from court as well as any legal representation on her behalf, which the defendant's lawyer, Costas Papamastorakis, speculated was due to her realising her travel insurance did not cover the fallout from sexual assault. When she was first questioned by Hersonissos Police Department, she allegedly told them that she was insured for rape. But it later became clear that the woman's travel insurance would not cover the rape case, it was reported in Law&Order. Mr Papamastorakis reportedly said 'the insurance company's lack of coverage was likely the reason why the complainant did not appear'. The young woman claimed at the time she had been raped and forcibly dragged out of a bar in Malia to an uncovered area by a burly, dark-skinned man. The Brit, who had been working as a DJ at the same bar, said they had consensual sex inside after he met the young woman who was partying with her friends. When they then went outside, the girl vomited from being drunk and he suggested she drink some water or to sit on a sidewalk before going back into the bar, he claimed. Later that night, he heard while eating food with friends that a young woman had been raped at the bar. The Brit, then 29, handed himself over to the police, believing they would inevitably question him. The court's decision to spare the British father was a huge win, Mr Papamastorakis said, whose client's life fell apart since the allegation, including the mother of his six children divorcing him. It comes only months after another Brit was facing a nightmare court battle over assault in Greece. A young woman who was gang raped by two men while on holiday in Crete was forced to return to Greece for a second trial in March, despite her two attackers previously receiving life sentences for their horrific crimes. The woman, who had just turned 18 at the time of the assault in June 2022, had been holidaying with friends in the city of Rethymno after finishing her A-Levels. As she was sitting on a sunbed following a night out, she was grabbed and dragged away by two strangers, who then took it in turns to rape her. The men, understood to have been Pakistani nationals who were in their 20s at the time, were apprehended by Greek authorities a few hours after the horrific attack. They confessed to the gang-rape at the time of their arrest but then reportedly said the woman consented in their court appearance a year later. The young woman is said to have been forced to stand just metres away from her attackers as she gave evidence. The harrowing case ended with the men being jailed for life - or so the woman's family thought, as they looked forward to moving on from the ordeal. But shockingly, the men took advantage of a Greek law which allows defendants to lodge an appeal within a certain time frame, giving them an automatic right to a full retrial with a fresh examination of witnesses and evidence. The young woman had no choice but to return to Greece to be put through the horrific trial process all over again, with her mother saying the experience will likely re-traumatise her.


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Rare pic of Madeleine McCann's brother amid fresh search for toddler in Portugal
Sean and his twin sister Amelie were just two when Madeleine disappeared 18 years ago. The parents of missing Madeleine McCann are helping their son reach his goal of becoming a gold medal Olympic athlete as investigators search for a trace of his sister. Madeleine, who went missing at the age of three in 2007 in the Algarve, has two younger twin siblings. A round of fresh searches began for Madeleine this week. Portuguese and German investigators are combing through land in the municipality of Lagos, near Praia da Luz in search for a trace of the girl who would now be 22-years-old. While the investigation gets underway, her brother, Sean McCann, an elite swimmer, is training for a possible shot at Olympic glory. Sean and his twin sister Amelie were just two when Madeleine disappeared 18 years ago. During that time, Sean, 20, has become a highly accomplished swimmer tipped to join Team GB in Los Angeles in 2028. Earlier this year, he was captured on camera with a gold medal around his neck after competing in a Mediterranean open water swimming lesson. He has racked up a series of other impressive achievements, with both he and his sister currently doing well in their studies at university. Speaking to the Daily Mail, Brian Kennedy, the pair's great-uncle, said Kate and Gerry have been very "pleased" with the twins' achievements. The Mirror reports that Sean is studying chemical engineering, and has been swimming competitively for nearly a decade, revealing in 2023 that he has braved 4m starts to swim before school since he was 11. He added that he also visits the gym for intense training three times a week. He next plans to represent Scotland at the 2026 Commonwealth Games. He recently wrote on a local website that he has been a high-flying swimmer for some time, having won "multiple county titles" after being selected to swim at City of Leicester. He wrote: "At the age of ten, I was selected to swim at City of Leicester, and I have since gone on to win multiple county titles, as well as becoming regional and national champion in my age group. In order to have achieved this, I have had to remain extremely dedicated, getting up at 4am multiple mornings each week to train." Sean represented Team Scotland at the Commonwealth Youth Games in 2023, making it to the 400 and 1500m Freestyle finals. He's also know to be a keen Open Water swimmer, and is part of the country's National Open Water Development Squad. Meanwhile, Amelie has her own sporting achievements, having competed in a series of cross country and triathlon events while studying at a university in the north of England.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
European human rights laws need to be ‘ripped up' to tackle migration crisis, top Tory says
EUROPEAN human rights laws need to be 'ripped up and rewritten' to deal with the immigration crisis, ex-Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has warned. The Tory big beast made a rare intervention today to slam the ECHR as 'totally outdated', and urged Sir Keir Starmer to join nations demanding it is overhauled. 2 Britain is not among a group of nine countries pushing for a 'new and open-minded conversation' about the interpretation of the Convention. Frustration is growing at migrants managing to dodge deportation with ludicrous reasons by appealing to the ECHR. Former Foreign Secretary Mr Hunt - a Conservative moderate - said Britain was best placed to lead the charge against overreaching foreign diktats. He told Times Radio: 'We have a globally mobile population. It is destabilising western politics. 'We saw the small boat crossings on Saturday. We need to rip up and rewrite international law.' While created after WW2 for 'laudable' reasons, Mr Hunt slammed it as 'totally outdated' and said the PM should spearhead European efforts to overhaul the ECHR. Sir Keir has vowed to pass laws ordering courts to throw out ridiculous appeals to European laws by foreign offenders or illegal migrants. Recent examples included an Albanian drug dealer who tried to fight deportation because his son disliked foreign chicken nuggets. Nigel Farage's Reform have vowed to quit the ECHR altogether, while Kemi Badenoch's Tories are open to the prospect. Labour's Attorney General Lord Richard Hermer was forced to apologise last week after likening calls to quit the ECHR with the rise of Nazism. The Sun Says: Seeing red HOW many Home Office geniuses does it take to work out that when the weather is good and the sea is calm more illegal migrants will try to cross the Channel? And how many French intelligence officers are needed to think that when le soleil is shining it might be a good idea to send a few extra cops down to the beach to stop them? That the Home Secretary thinks this new 'red days report' is in any way illuminating manages to be both patronising and laughable. We already knew the smuggling gangs — which the Government keeps pledging to smash — were cramming more human cargo on board each dangerously ill-equipped dinghy. Instead, the useless Home Office has merely described a worsening situation. It's a public admission that the Government appears wholly powerless to stop the problem. Ministers are still miles away from a viable solution. Other than praying for bad weather to save their summer.