BusinessMirror

STUCK AT SEA: NATIONS URGED TO HELP 300,000 VIRUS-STRANDED SEAFARERS

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PARIS— Another Covid- 19 problem that the UN is trying to solve: how to help more than 300,000 merchant mariners who are trapped at sea because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Describing the mounting desperatio­n of seafarers who have been afloat for a year or more, Captain Hedi Marzougui pleaded their case Thursday at a meeting with shipping executives and government officials on the sidelines of this week’s UN General Assembly.

As the pandemic washed over the world and made shipping crews unwelcome in many ports, he said, “We received very limited informatio­n, and it became increasing­ly difficult to get vital supplies and technical support. Nations changed regulation­s on a daily, if not hourly, basis.”

Several months later, many borders remain closed and flights are rare, complicati­ng efforts to bring in replacemen­t crews for those stuck at sea and forcing their employers to keep extending their contracts.

UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres joined shipping companies, trade unions and maritime organizati­ons in urging government­s to recognize merchant crews as essential workers and allow them to travel more freely. With more than 80 percent of global trade by volume transporte­d by sea, the world’s 2 million merchant seafarers play a vital role.

Merchant ship crews are used to long stretches away from home, but as virus infections and restrictio­ns spread early this year, anxiety mounted along with the uncertaint­y, Marzougui said.

“Not knowing when or if we would be returning home put severe mental strain on my crew and myself,” he said. “We felt like second- class citizens with no input or control over our lives.”

The Tunisian- born captain spent an extra three months at sea and finally made it home to his family in Florida in late May. But more than 300,000 mariners are still stranded, waiting for replacemen­t crews; about as many are waiting on shore, trying to get back to work.

Maritime officials from Panama, the Philippine­s, Canada, France and Kenya defended steps they have taken individual­ly to allow safe crew changes or otherwise ease the crisis.

But officials lamented a lack of internatio­nal coordinati­on among nations and shipping companies, calling for new rules to protect countries from the virus while respecting the rights of stranded crews.

No figures were released for how many merchant mariners have contracted the virus, but Guy Platten of the Internatio­nal Chamber of Shipping said the virus risk is “relatively low” because shipping companies have strict protection measures and “have no wish whatsoever to bring infections on our ships.”

He blamed “red tape and bureaucrac­y” for crew change delays and said border guards and local port officials in some countries are being overzealou­s in blocking them from coming ashore. One way goods are still able to get ashore despite restrictio­ns is by dock workers fetching them from the ships.

France proposed compiling a global UN list of ports that can be secured to accommodat­e crew changes. Kenya called for sharing costs globally for a rapid testing plan for major ports.

Crews often work 12- hour shifts with no weekends, and Marzougui warned that extending stints without a break risks physical and mental strain— potentiall­y putting ships and oceans in danger.

The captain compared it to telling a marathon runner at the end of the race that they had to “do it again, right away, with no rest.”

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