Survivors mark 1-year anniversary of Costa Concordia disaster - CNN International

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Workers stand on the wrecked Costa Concordia cruise ship off the Italian island of Giglio on Sunday, January 13, during commemorations marking the first anniversary of the cruise liner disaster. Survivors, grieving relatives and locals on the island of Giglio gathered to remember the 32 people who were lost.
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On January 13, 2012, the cruise ship Costa Concordia crashed into a bed of rocks near the port on the Italian island of Giglio, taking 32 lives. Although the ship owner announced that efforts to move the cruise liner would begin in May, the ship carcass still lies halfway submerged a year later.
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Relatives hold bouquets of flowers before throwing them into the sea on Sunday during commemorations.
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Flowers thrown into the sea by relatives Sunday float by the ship.
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A man holds a flag on his balcony overlooking the port on the Italian island of Giglio on Sunday.
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A commemorative board with the names of the victims is unveiled in Giglio on Sunday.
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The Costa Concordia cruise ship lies aground near the port on Wednesday, January 9.
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Cranes and floating decks surrounding the ship light up the dusk on Wednesday.
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People stand at the port Thursday, January 10, and look at the wrecked ship.
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Workers stand on the Costa Concordia cruise ship on Tuesday, January 8.
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See photos from the shipwreck in 2012." border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto0011" width="640"/>Workers in a small boat pass by the Costa Concordia on Monday, January 7. See photos from the shipwreck in 2012.





  • Family members and survivors mark the anniversary with a somber memorial
  • The Costa Concordia ran aground off Italian island last year, killing 32 people
  • Several hundred passengers are in Giglio to commemorate the anniversary


Giglio, Italy (CNN) -- A boat's horn blasted 32 times off the coast of Italy on Sunday, honoring each of the victims who died a year ago when a luxury cruise liner ran aground.
Family members of those who perished tossed wreaths, lilies and notes into icy waters at a ceremony marking the anniversary of the Costa Concordia crash. And a large boulder bearing a plaque with victims' names was lowered into the same sea that claimed their lives.
The somber memorial was a sharp contrast to the chaos of a year ago, when the massive ship ran aground with 3,200 passengers and 1,000 crew members on board.
According to passengers' accounts, pandemonium erupted as guests rushed to fill the lifeboats and escape the ship. Some crew members helped passengers and then jumped overboard; remaining members seemed helpless to handle the melee.
The night of the accident, many survivors sought shelter in churches and other buildings on the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio.
At one of the churches on Sunday, many survivors and family members of victims gathered for a two-hour Mass to remember the victims and honor divers and rescue workers.
"I came to pray for my colleagues and the passengers who lost their lives," said Santosh Velhal, a Costa Concordia crew member from Mumbai who worked in the ship's security department.
John Heil, an American whose parents, Gerald and Barbara Heil of Minnesota, died in the accident, also traveled to Italy for Sunday's ceremony.
The day's events also included the dedication of a plaque with the victims' names on a wall in Giglio's harbor and a violin concert held in a local church. At 9:45 p.m., the exact one-year anniversary of the moment of impact, survivors planned to light 32 lanterns -- one for each of the victims.
Meanwhile, the Costa Concordia, now ahalf-submerged carcass, still sits in the harbor where it ran aground. Hundreds of people are working 24-7 to secure it, but salvage efforts are taking longer than expected. Officials now hope to have the ship upright by late June or early July and to tow it to some port by September.
During Sunday's ceremony, the skies were overcast and a fierce wind blew.
The seas were rough, and the waves washed up against the wreckage and salvage barges with such force that crews had to reinforce their equipment.
"Thank God the weather wasn't like this last year," Karin Fogazzi told reporters as she stared at the wreckage.
The weather was more temperate last year, when she and her husband Roberto escaped the ship carrying their 10-month-old son Daniel down a rope ladder.
The family came on Sunday to mark the occasion, she said, and to try to help deal with the post-traumatic stress disorder they've been battling over the past year.
The day was a somber reminder of the lives lost in the shipwreck, but it was also important for the 900 residents of Giglio to commemorate an event that changed their island forever.
"This is not a celebration," Mayor Sergio Ortelli said. "This year has been dramatic for the people of this island who have had their whole lives turned upside down by this event. We hope our island returns to a place of tranquility once the steel monster out there is towed away."
CNN's Catherine E. Shoichet contributed to this report.
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