Costa Crociere CEO says cruise company's HQ will remain in Italy despite transfers to Germany

FILE - This is a Monday May 12, 2014 file photo taken from video by Nigeria's Boko Haram terrorist network, and shows their leader Abubakar Shekau speaking to the camera. Suspected Boko Haram militants attacked a village on the shore of Lake Chad early Friday Feb. 13, 2015 marking the first such violence against the neighbor contributing the most military might to the regional fight against the Nigeria-based terror group. (AP Photo/File) (The Associated Press)

Protesters hold a banner reading in Italian "Don't move, Costa" in Genoa, Italy, Friday, Feb. 13, 2015. Costa Crociere’s chief executive is facing a public relations battle over the company’s future in Italy on the heels of the guilty verdict and 16-year sentence against former captain Francesco Schettino for deaths of 32 people in the 2012 shipwreck of the Costa Concordia. Costa’s German CEO Michael Thamm met Friday with Italy’s transport minister to offer assurances that the Italian cruise company owned by U.S. parent Carnival has no plans to move the headquarters out of Italy. Thamm was summoned to Rome after Costa announced it was moving four departments with 160 people from its Genoa headquarters to Hamburg, Germany. Thamm said afterward that "Italy remains a market with huge potential." In Genoa, union members protested the announced transfers, saying they will weaken the company’s Italian identity. (AP Photo/Luca Zennaro, Ansa) (The Associated Press)

Women wear T-shirts reading in Italian "Don't move, Costa" in Genoa, Italy, Friday, Feb. 13, 2015. Costa Crociere’s chief executive is facing a public relations battle over the company’s future in Italy on the heels of the guilty verdict and 16-year sentence against former captain Francesco Schettino for deaths of 32 people in the 2012 shipwreck of the Costa Concordia. Costa’s German CEO Michael Thamm met Friday with Italy’s transport minister to offer assurances that the Italian cruise company owned by U.S. parent Carnival has no plans to move the headquarters out of Italy. Thamm was summoned to Rome after Costa announced it was moving four departments with 160 people from its Genoa headquarters to Hamburg, Germany. Thamm said afterward that "Italy remains a market with huge potential." In Genoa, union members protested the announced transfers, saying they will weaken the company’s Italian identity. (AP Photo/Luca Zennaro, Ansa) (The Associated Press)

The CEO of Costa Crociere is facing a public relations battle over the company's future in Italy after former captain Francesco Schettino was handed a 16-year sentence for the deaths of 32 people in the 2012 shipwreck of the Costa Concordia.

Costa's German CEO, Michael Thamm, met Friday with Italy's transport minister to offer assurances that the Italian cruise company owned by U.S. parent Carnival has no plans to move the headquarters out of Italy.

Thamm was summoned to Rome after Costa announced last month the transfer of four departments with 160 people from its Genoa headquarters to Hamburg, Germany. Thamm said afterward that "Italy remains a market with huge potential."

In Genoa, union members protested the announced transfers, saying they will weaken the company's Italian identity.