Khaleej Times

UAE gets stranded sailors back home, salaries paid

- Ismail Sebugwaawo

abu dhabi — The UAE’s Federal Transport Authority (FTA) for Land and Maritime has helped 60 Asian sailors receive their payments and get back to their home countries after they were abandoned on stranded vessels.

The authoritie­s had intervened after the sailors on 14 ships from Asian countries complained about their suffering and difficulti­es from the non-payment of their salaries for many months. The sailors, on Pakistani, Indian and Sri Lankan vessels, had been abandoned by their companies on the UAE waters and ports for months.

After receiving the complaints, officials from the Maritime Transport Sector helped trace the ships’ owners in various countries and forced them to pay the workers’ salaries through legal means. “A team was formed to look into the sailors’ complaints and carry out the necessary investigat­ions,” said officials from the FTA.

“As a humanitari­an initiative, the authority always communicat­es with sailors in order to enquire about their living conditions and to provide them with support through maritime agents or charity establishm­ents until their problems are solved.”

Authoritie­s said they communicat­ed with the country of the ship’s flag, the shipping agent and the owner of the vessel to address the suffering of the sailors, as they are responsibl­e for the ships and the seamen, as per internatio­nal agreements. In some cases, the maritime officials amicably settled payment issues with the sailors, clearing their outstandin­g dues before transporti­ng them back to their home countries. In other instances, the authoritie­s took legal action against the ship owners to ensure that the workers’ payment issues were resolved.

FTA officials said the employers were creating a problem by not paying their workers on time, which accumulate­d the sailors’ salaries, making it more difficult to obtain the payments. Authoritie­s said they often faced problems in helping the sailors and settling their issues quickly because of the difficulti­es in tracing the ship owners or their agents, plus lack of cooperatio­n from the ships’ flag bearer nations. “Some sailors refrain from reporting to the authoritie­s in time because of the fear that their employers will take arbitrary measures against them,” said officials.

According to the FTA, although the owners of these vessels were foreign and the ships carry flags of other nations, the UAE spares no effort in providing support to the foreign ships stranded in the country’s waters. The FTA said that the problem of abandoned ships is a global one and occurs at most ports worldwide, becoming a common occurrence in the global economy post-recession, when many maritime companies were declared bankrupt.

ismail@khaleejtim­es.com

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