An ITF Inspector Was Physically Assaulted By A Ship’s Master

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  • An ITF inspector was physically assaulted by a ship’s Master.
  • The ITF has a zero-tolerance policy towards violence at work.
  • Inspectors are not always welcomed with open arms by a shipowner or their representative on board – particularly if they have something to hide.

An ITF inspector was physically assaulted by a ship’s Master in an unprecedented attack which the Federation says must be condemned, says an article published on their website. 

ITF strongly condemns

The assault happened onboard a vessel which was being investigated by the Inspectorate of the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) for failing to comply with safety regulations, and for apparent irregularities in crew pay and conditions. The company is a well-known European shipowner, with their vessel flagged to landlocked Luxemburg.

“The ITF strongly condemns what has happened here: a physical assault against an ITF inspector who was just trying to do their job,” said ITF Inspectorate Coordinator Steve Trowsdale.

“The ITF has a zero-tolerance policy towards violence at work, and this extends to how employers in the industry or their agents treat officials such ITF inspectors,” said Trowsdale.

Inspectors are not always welcomed with open arms

Trowsdale said the ITF’s 134 inspectors, coordinators, and union contacts “do outstanding work” daily defending the rights of seafarers, helping thousands of seafarers every year. “But” he said, “our inspectors are not always welcomed with open arms by a shipowner or their representative on board – particularly if they have something to hide.”

As part of their investigations, inspectors are often required to physically board vessels to verify the welfare of seafarers for themselves. Inspectors also need to go through onboard records related to pay and recorded hours of work and rest to make sure they match up with what seafarers have experienced.

“It doesn’t matter how angry or agitated a shipowner or their representative is: there is no excuse and no room for an ITF inspector, nor anyone working in the maritime industry, frankly, to be physically assaulted. Violence needs to be unacceptable in our industry,” said Trowsdale.

ITF to review inspector safety

Since the unnamed inspector was attacked earlier this year, the ITF has launched a review into the training and support it offers to inspectorate officials. But the ITF also has a warning for others in the industry.

“We train our inspectors to deal with aggressive people and situations on vessels, and of course we offer them support when needed,” said Trowsdale. 

“But when incidents like this happen, however unprecedented, we have to stop and ask whether as an organisation there’s anything more that we can do to protect our team going forward.”

“We’ll look at what we need to do internally,” Trowsdale continued. “But stopping incidents like this is going to take the whole of the industry adopting the ITF’s zero-tolerance approach to violence and violent attitudes. Any seafarer, Master, employer, or agent who makes our workplaces unsafe should have no future in our industry. Period.”

Maritime must be safe for everyone, including women

“There is too much violence and too much intimidation that takes place in the maritime industry,” said Lena Dyring, ITF Seafarers’ Section Women’s representative.

“And while violence and intimidation at work is bad for all maritime workers – for our seafarers, for our inspectors, for our tug and towage workers – it is especially problematic for women and our industry’s ability to attract and retain women seafarers.”

The ITF has been active in campaigns to end violence at work for decades. In the last year, the Federation and its maritime affiliates have been active in support of governments ratifying International Labour Organization Convention 190 (C190), which came into force on 25 June 2021. C190 has a particular focus on gender-based violence and harassment in the world of work.

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Source: itf