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Italy sentences Turkish man to prison over migrant shipwreck

A life jacket from Spanish NGO Astral is pictured in the so-called boat cemetery, where skiffs are dumped after the migrants and refugees' crossing from North Africa, in Lampedusa on September 27, 2018. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP)

An Italian court sentenced an accused smuggler involved in a shipwreck last year that killed at least 94 migrants to two decades in prison Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reported.

The court in the southern city of Crotone found 29-year-old Turkish national Gün Ufuk guilty of crimes including causing a shipwreck and aiding illegal migration.

It also ordered him to pay a 3 million euro ($3.2 million) fine and pay damages to civil plaintiffs.

Ufuk, who has denied being in charge of the boat, was one of four alleged human smugglers on a migrant vessel that went down in stormy weather just off the coast of Calabria on February 26.

The boat, which carried about 180 migrants from Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and Syria, including many children, had departed Turkey but went down meters from shore.

For days after the shipwreck, bodies and debris washed up on the beaches of the area.

One suspected smuggler died in the shipwreck, while two others are facing trial.

Ufuk told the court Wednesday that he was hired to be the boat’s mechanic, but was never at the helm.

“I had to flee Turkey for political reasons,” he told the court, explaining how he had been jailed for criticizing President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

In the wake of the shipwreck, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni vowed to crack down on human smugglers, including tougher sentences and giving preferential quotas to workers from countries who help fight smugglers.

Her far-right Brothers of Italy party won elections in 2022 on a pledge to curb the arrivals of migrants by sea.

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