Seán Binder has described his acquittal on several serious charges in a Greek court as âan enormous reliefâ.
Mr Binder, who was born in Germany but raised in Co Kerry, and 23 other humanitarians were found not guilty on Thursday of people smuggling, belonging to a criminal organisation and money laundering.
He travelled to the Greek island of Lesbos in late 2017 to volunteer with the Emergency Response Centre, an NGO involved in search and rescue missions.
In 2018, he and 23 other volunteers were charged with a series of offences. The trial was delayed on several occasions.
âFor seven years, we have had this threat of 20 yearsâ imprisonment hang over our heads,â Mr Binder said on Friday.
Speaking on RTÃâs Morning Ireland, he said âthere wasnât a shred of evidenceâ against him or the other volunteers.
âThe foundation of the smuggling charge was that we did search and rescue. The accusation of spying was that we used WhatsApp. The fact that we were charged [with] money laundering stems from the fact that we raised money to buy laundry machines. It was farcical.
âThe only real outcome of all of this is that it has stopped people from engaging in search and rescue. It has been enough to scare them away from the shoreline, and thatâs the point.â
The case was widely criticised by human rights groups, who called on Greek authorities to drop the charges.
Mr Binder, an experienced diver, explained the type of work he did with the NGO.
âFrom midnight to 7am we had done something called a spotting shift â standing at a cliff face, just looking out and listening, listening for peopleâs screams or little lights that would indicate thereâs a boat in distress, and if there was, we would go out to sea or provide medical assistance at the shoreline.â
Mr Binder, who spent more than 100 days in pretrial detention, said his life has been âon pauseâ since he was indicted.
âI have been unable to continue with my life in many respects, although when I went to prison and I met people who were even more adversely affected by the criminal justice system, it encouraged me to retrain as a barrister.â
He said that while deciding to become a barrister âhas been a positive stepâ, his indictment meant he has been unable to work or âsave to have children or a familyâ.
Despite the personal toll the situation has taken on him, he said the âfar more importantâ consequence is that fewer search and rescue operations are happening due to fear of prosecution.
âPeople drown because there is less search and rescue happening.â
Mr Binder thanked his family and friends, many of whom were in court on Thursday, and the wider Irish community for their âtremendousâ support.
He said he convinced his family to celebrate the verdict by swimming in the sea last night.
âThey very, very reluctantly were swimming with me last night in the dark.â

