- Four cruise ship workers died of non-coronavirus causes while stranded at sea, report says.
- A woman who jumped overboard and a man who apparently died by suicide are among four crew killed by non-coronavirus causes on cruise ships.
- The string of deaths began on May 2, when a crew member died after falling overboard off the Royal Caribbean’s Jewel of the Seas.
- The circumstances surrounded that death were not immediately clear and an investigation is ongoing.
Four cruise ship workers have died in the last 10 days from non-coronavirus causes as their vessels remain stranded at sea, reports New York Post.
With cruise-trips canceled and more than 70,000 workers marooned on ships across US waters, several workers have committed suicide.
Deaths on-board
A woman who jumped overboard and a man who apparently died by suicide are among four crew killed by non-coronavirus causes on cruise ships with workers stranded onboard.
A 39-year-old Ukrainian died Sunday jumping from the Regal Princess off the Netherlands, Princess Cruises, a subsidiary of the Carnival corporation, said Monday.
The ship was in the process of repatriating its crew.
It was the third death over the weekend on ships with crew trapped on board since the explosion of the coronavirus pandemic, and the fourth worker to die in less than 10 days in unclear circumstances.
With crew members increasingly desperate to return home, a group of about 14 workers began a hunger strike at the weekend on the “Navigator of the Seas,” a Royal Caribbean cruise ship anchored in Miami.
“At this moment we feel that we’re all hostages,” one crew member told the Miami Herald anonymously because of fears the company would retaliate. “This company needs to understand we are not boxes of food that can be moved around.”
Crew members in limbo!
On March 13, all cruise ships were subjected to no-sail orders as the outbreak was exploding worldwide. Although passengers have disembarked, crew members who remained on board have been in limbo.
There are 104 cruise ships in and around US waters with 71,900 crew members aboard in total, the US Coast Guard confirmed last week.
On Sunday, a worker was found dead of “natural causes” on the “Mariner of the Seas,” a Royal Caribbean spokesman said Monday.
According to the Cruise Law News blog, the crew member was a Chinese citizen. The ship is one of several that sail between Florida and the Bahamas.
On Saturday, a man died of apparent suicide on the “Carnival Breeze” as it headed to Europe from the Bahamas to repatriate its crew. “His death is not related to COVID-19, but out of respect for his family, we will not be providing additional details,” said Carnival spokesman Roger Frizzell.
On May 2, a crew member went overboard from the “Jewel of the Seas.” A spokesperson for Royal Caribbean said it is assisting authorities in that investigation.
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Source: New York Post