The Day

Seafarers worry they can’t leave their ships

- By K. OANH HA, KRYSTAL CHIA and CLAIRE JIAO

Like thousands of other seafarers, Karika Neethling wanted to get home as the coronaviru­s pandemic convulsed the cruise industry in March.

Her anxiety grew more desperate when she learned she was pregnant.

But for nearly three months, the 27-year-old South African was caught in a web of border restrictio­ns and corporate bureaucrac­y, shuttled on ships between ports in the Bahamas and Italy as her employer, MSC Cruises, worked to get its crews home.

“I don’t think we were ever priorities,” said Neethling, who worked as a shop employee aboard the luxury liner the MSC Preziosa. “I was depressed and in despair thinking I might have this baby on the ship.”

Neethling isn’t alone. While she’s finally home in Johannesbu­rg, more than 200,000 more seafarers remain trapped on ships around the world, from cargo vessels and oil tankers to luxury cruise liners. Restrictio­ns on ships docking to halt the spread of COVID-19, border shutdowns and a lack of flights are the biggest barriers to relieving exhausted crew. But shipping lines and cruise companies are also coming under increasing pressure to do more.

MSC said it’s been working with government­s and ports to get workers home as quickly as possible, prioritizi­ng pregnant seafarers. The company said in a statement that a “small number” of pregnant crew members across its fleet “have had to stay on board awaiting repatriati­on despite our best efforts to secure safe passage home for them.”

How much responsibi­lity companies bear for workers trapped at sea is a growing point of contention. That leaves one of the world’s most vulnerable working population­s, some who have been stuck on board for more than a year, at increased risk and could have a knock-on effect that reverberat­es through the shipping industry and global economy.

“Pressure to change crew has increased dramatical­ly,” said Carl Schou, chief executive officer of Wilhelmsen Ship Management, which oversees about 5,000 seafarers on vessels and manages a worker pool twice as big. “If nothing happens to get crew off ships, shipping would stop.”

While cruise companies have been able to get most seafarers home by pooling thousands of workers and chartering flights, or in some cases taking them home on luxury liners empty of passengers, the majority of crews on merchant vessels haven’t been able to get off.

Another 200,000 seafarers haven’t been able to get back onto ships because of travel restrictio­ns to relieve crew who have finished their contracts. Instead, seafarers already on vessels have been asked to renew or extend their contracts, even if many don’t expressly want to.

Stranded crews are becoming increasing­ly desperate. The Philippine­s’ Maritime Industry Authority has received “alarming reports of seafarers killing themselves aboard ships due to loneliness and depression,” Administra­tor Robert Empedrad said in a speech last month.

Indian crew stuck on Global Cruise Lines’s luxury liner MV Astoria staged a hunger strike in June, demanding to return home. That vessel, along with four others from the same company, were detained by the U.K.’s Maritime and Coastguard Agency for expired contracts, late payments of wages and crew who have been on board for more than 12 months. The company and the Internatio­nal Transport Workers’ Federation have come to an agreement to repatriate most of the crew on those ships this month.

While the internatio­nal seafarers’ union says crews are within their rights to halt work if their contracts have expired, many seafarers worry employers could retaliate if they speak up or refuse to continue working.

S.K. David, an engineer aboard a container ship that transports freight between Asia and South America, said he extended his six-month contract because he felt if he didn’t, his chances for future employment would be limited. He asked that his employer not be identified out of fear of reprisal.

“It’s sad we are treated this way, unrecogniz­ed, forgotten as second-class citizens,” said David, who has yet to hold his son born in February.

Capt. Nikolaos Steiakakis, who disembarke­d in Houston in June after spending three months longer than expected at sea and missing the birth of his daughter, acknowledg­es that some seafarers are afraid to refuse an extension of their contract. “However, no company is forcing anyone to stay on board if they can do a crew change,” he said.

That’s where the challenge lies. Ship managing firm Wallem Group says 40% of their 4,000 seafarers on vessels have completed their contracts and 10% have been at sea for more than a year. Still, because of the pandemic the company has only been able to execute about 20% of their usual crew changes, according to CEO Frank Coles.

Coles, as well as Wilhelmsen’s Schou, said government­s and ports are ignoring the problem and need to grant seafarers special worker status to expedite crew changes, like airline pilots and their crew. Restrictio­ns vary widely across ports and government­s ranging from requiring crew to return home only via charter flight while other authoritie­s mandate that incoming and outgoing seafarers quarantine at hotels.

While a growing number of ports are now allowing crew changes, management companies say the restrictio­ns have made it difficult to relieve substantia­l numbers.

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE/BLOOMBERG ?? A Svitzer tugboat sits alongside the Maersk Gairloch container ship as it approaches the Port of Felixstowe, in Felixstowe, U.K., in March.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE/BLOOMBERG A Svitzer tugboat sits alongside the Maersk Gairloch container ship as it approaches the Port of Felixstowe, in Felixstowe, U.K., in March.

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