Source:ITF
Pic courtesy: http://www.fleetmon.com
The Panamanian-flagged bulk carrier Kouyou was detained on Oct
24 in the Port of Quebec, Canada, after maritime labour officials determined
that crew were owed more than USD51,000 in backpay.
It is the third detention in Canada of a vessel under the new
international Maritime Labour Convention (MLC 2006), which came into force
worldwide in August, a media statement from ITF has said.
Problems aboard the ship were discovered by Mr Gerard
Bradbury, an inspector with the International Transport Workers Federation
(ITF) and Unifor union.
Mr Gerard explained: "Twenty
Burmese and Vietnamese crew, including the Canadian Captain James Maung are not
being paid or treated properly, and in particular had been shorted on the
home-allotment portion of their pay that provides for families left at home
while seafarers are abroad at work.”
The most alarming situation aboard involved crew who had paid a
total of USD6,600 in fees to obtain their jobs, Bradbury said.
Recruitment or placement fees paid to manning agents are illegal
under international labour conventions. In some cases, crew were also receiving
less than half the wage owed them under their labour agreement, he stated. Wage
calculations are ongoing, but are expected to top USD51,000 US. Four crew have
asked to be repatriated after receiving wages owed them.
Transport Canada was notified and has stepped in to detain the
vessel until all wages have been taken care of and the crew have been sent
home.
Mr Bradbury said that contact has been made with the Japanese
owners Doun Kisen KK, the Japanese company that owns the vessel, and that talks
are under way.
The Kouyou is the third foreign vessel detained in Canada for
serious violations of international labour standards and violations of a
collective bargaining agreement.
Mr
Peter Lahay ITF Canada coordinator said: “We are
extremely pleased that Canada has seriously given life to the MLC. On our
request Transport Canada inspectors are enforcing a convention that has been
agreed by the world’s shipping community and member states of the ILO. The ILO
has concluded that the world’s seafarers are among the most isolated and
marginalised workers in the world and are in need to special protection. That
is what we are doing.”
He went on to say that Canadians should be proud that theirs was
the first country anywhere in the world to detain a vessel under the provisions
of the MLC. In all three cases so far, crew members from the vessels Hydra
Warrior, Lia M, and now Kouyou were being badly cheated.
"The world’s seafarers can rest assured that if they have
problems aboard their ships Canada's ITF inspectors will do everything in their
power to correct the problems," Mr Peter Lahay added.
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