Cruise ship captain Francesco Schettino's defence has requested a plea bargain deal at his trial for the Costa Concordia disaster, saying he is ready to serve three years and five months in prison.
The request was made by lawyer Domenico Pepe after an earlier plea bargain bid was thrown out by the judge in charge of preliminary investigations into the disaster in which 32 people died.
Schettino's trial resumed on Wednesday, with the defendant dubbed "Italy's most hated man" facing 20 years in prison for the spectacular 2012 wreck in which 32 people lost their lives.
Schettino is accused of multiple manslaughter, abandoning ship and causing environmental damage over the Costa Concordia disaster off the island of Giglio.
"We're here today to get justice," Francesco Di Ciollo, who represents two Italian families, said ahead of the start of the hearing in Grosseto - the city nearest to the crash site.
"Survivors have to live with anxiety for the rest of their lives. There was darkness, panic, they were stranded inside without a way out," he said.
The trial began last week but was immediately postponed due to a lawyers' strike and could last for months.
"We're expecting it to last more than a year," said Massimiliano Gabrielli, a lawyer for some of the survivors.
The Costa Concordia crashed off Giglio on the night of January 13, 2012 with 4229 people from 70 countries on board, killing 32 people.
Schettino was nicknamed "Captain Coward" for leaving while terrified people were trapped aboard the cruise liner and then sobbing in the arms of the ship's chaplain.
The 52-year-old has been depicted as a blackguard who was showing off for a blonde female guest when he performed a risky manoeuvre to "salute" the island.
Schettino's lawyers, Domenico and Francesco Pepe, have called for 100 witnesses and pledged to show that "no single person was responsible".
"He did not abandon ship," said Donato Laino, another lawyer for Schettino.
"If he had stayed another 10 minutes he would have fallen in the water and not been able to manage the evacuation."
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