Seafarers Should Voice Their Concern As Life at Sea Becomes Tougher

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An oil spill that happened in Singapore waters on Jul 25-26, involving the ship, operated by a well-known, major, Asian company sheds light on the seafarers life at sea, says an article published in the Maritime Bulletin. 

Toxic Crew Management 

An insider who alerted the article writer, asked for anonymity, quite an understandable precaution in nowadays era of strengthening persecution of anyone who dares to defy ruling agenda. It is not spill what’s most important in this story, it’s the roots of it. According to insider information, quality seafarers are fleeing the company, not because of salaries, which are quite high, but because of intolerable, and indeed, risky and toxic crewing management practices. 

Seafarers Overburdened & Held Responsible

Seafarers are overburdened with ever growing paper work, and with that, they’re responsible for each and any mishap and accident, they’re guilty if something happens, and they’re to be punished, leaving company clean and innocent.

Seafarers Made To Sign Papers for Injury

Some two months ago, the writer’s friend, an engineer working in European major tanker company, shared with him,  put it mildly, surprise, when on boarding the ship after leave, he was acquainted with reports on recent accident, and had to sign a paper, making him responsible for any injury he may suffer in similar circumstances. He was informed, you see. That is, his safety is his responsibility only, not company’s. If anything happens, he signed a document, relieving company of any liability, he is to blame, he is to carry all costs and consequences.

Seafarers Urged To Be Whistleblowers

There’s another new trend gathering way nowadays – seafarers are pressured into becoming whistleblowers, kind of snitches society membership, embracing whole crews.

Working Environment Deteriorating?

In general, working environment in shipping has become, during last two decades, quite toxic for professionals, from seafarers to honest, hard working private ship owners. Crews have nobody to ask, nowhere to turn to, in search of justice and help. If they work on a ship belonging to private owner, they receive quick response and help, when encountering trouble. If they work in a major company via manning agency, they’re helpless and vulnerable to any trouble. They’re on their own, and they’re to be blamed in almost any circumstances.

Shipowners Living in Legal Bubble?

New business culture transformed big ship owners into faceless, inhuman monsters, a mesh of owners, managers, and third-party contractors. They exist in artificially created legal bubble (thanks to international maritime bodies), making them immune to almost any kind of trouble, and freeing them from any responsibility towards crews. In increasingly socialistic global economy, culture of CEOs has become one of hallmarks of modern business landscape. Soviet-style CEO management is defined by total lack of responsibility towards anybody and anything, except anonymous directors or shareholders boards. Their main care is their career and income. Of course, one of the main conditions of their successful career building is readiness to quickly respond, and support, any new trend, any new agenda, propagated by globalism leaders. They can’t go against mainstream, however ruining and harmful it may be for the company and for crews.

NGOs Aren’t the Solution

Seafarers can’t turn to social and charity institutions, either. Nowadays, there are hordes of NGOs, Funds, Foundations and Associations, whose main and only goal is care for seafarers, protecting them from evil shipping environment, impersonated by private ship owners. They protect seamen from any problem and woe, whether real or fake, except from those which are on top of seamen woes list. Gender gap, mental health, abandonment, rest/work hours, piracy stress, on and on goes the list with problems, which are either totally fake (like gender gap), or negligent, for the majority of seafarers. To put it short, those institutions aren’t the solution of any real problem, they’re part of the problem.

Lack of Trade Unions for Help?

And of course, seafarers can’t turn to trade unions. There are effectively, no trade unions left, except one monster spider, covering by its’ poisonous net nearly all of global shipping. By the way, I believe the future of trade unions lies in internet, in forms of diverse and independent from any international or governmental body, online unions of mutual help and protection. I’m pretty sure, that ITF, its’ bosses (ILO, UN) and its’ minions (national affiliates), have no future, they’re doomed, by sheer anachronism of their nature and practices.

Seafarers To Voice Concerns

With all that said, the writer puts the onus on shipping professionals who must defend themselves, they should start doing it long time ago. They should, for starters, establish their own stage, to voice their real concerns and problems, and discuss probable solutions.

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Source: Maritime Bulletin