News
2010
Feb 08
Seafarers fear job loss more than pirates
Despite the threat posed by piracy, seafarers are more fearful of a ban on manning ships passing the pirate-plagued Somalia coast as it would put their families’ livelihoods at risk. United Filipino Seafarers president Nelson Ramirez said a ban would adversely affect some 229,000 Filipino seafarers now working on merchant shipping vessels around the world.
"How could we ask Filipino seamen be pulled off ships out of fear of what might happen?" Ramirez said in an article on the United Catholic Asian News website.
The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) had earlier recommended to President Arroyo to impose a ban on the deployment of seafarers to foreign flagships that ply pirate-infested waters in Somalia.
Somali pirates released the previous day a Greek-owned cargo ship and its crew after detaining it since Nov. 10, 2009. The vessel, MV Filitsa, seized from the Indian Ocean carried three Greeks and 19 Filipinos.
Fifty-eight Filipino seamen on board five vessels remain in the hands of pirates, Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) records show.
'Bad information'
However, Ramirez said that the DFA's recommendation may have been based on "bad information."
He pointed out that while seamen can always back out individually with no backlash, "a ban would cost us thousands of jobs."
Reynaldo Juego, legal adviser to the Philippine Church’s apostolate to seafarers, echoed Ramirez’s concern that the ban would hurt the Filipino seafarer more than protect him.
"DFA tried banning Filipino worker deployment to Jordan and Iraq a few years ago, but workers just went to other places before going to the banned areas," Juego said.
Sailors’ families will suffer because their breadwinner will not find any job in the Philippines that will pay them as much as their overseas work, Juego added.
"The ban will only cost seafarers their jobs" and the country its competitive edge, he said.
Protection against blacklisting
He added that without a ban, a Filipino seafarer has the right to refuse assignments in hazardous areas. Seafarers can repatriate to the Philippines without being blacklisted by the international shipping industry if they decide to do so.
"Since they cannot be blacklisted they are protected. DOLE has this guarantee already," he said.
The Apostleship of the Sea (AOS) is the Catholic Church’s agency for the pastoral care of people who earn a livelihood from the sea, their dependents and communities.
Its former national director, Scalabrini Father Savino Bernardi, had said he was not in favor of a ban when DFA proposed one in 2008 because this would "paralyze the shipping industry."
460 Pinoy seafarers abducted since 2006
DOLE records show 460 Filipinos manning 38 ships have been abducted by Somali pirates since 2006, and 402 among them have been released.
One Filipino seafarer died while in captivity due to an illness aggravated by the prolonged detention, Ermita added.
Money sent home by overseas Filipino seafarers reached a record US$2.5 billion in the first nine months of 2009, DOLE reported.
"How could we ask Filipino seamen be pulled off ships out of fear of what might happen?" Ramirez said in an article on the United Catholic Asian News website.
The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) had earlier recommended to President Arroyo to impose a ban on the deployment of seafarers to foreign flagships that ply pirate-infested waters in Somalia.
Somali pirates released the previous day a Greek-owned cargo ship and its crew after detaining it since Nov. 10, 2009. The vessel, MV Filitsa, seized from the Indian Ocean carried three Greeks and 19 Filipinos.
Fifty-eight Filipino seamen on board five vessels remain in the hands of pirates, Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) records show.
'Bad information'
However, Ramirez said that the DFA's recommendation may have been based on "bad information."
He pointed out that while seamen can always back out individually with no backlash, "a ban would cost us thousands of jobs."
Reynaldo Juego, legal adviser to the Philippine Church’s apostolate to seafarers, echoed Ramirez’s concern that the ban would hurt the Filipino seafarer more than protect him.
"DFA tried banning Filipino worker deployment to Jordan and Iraq a few years ago, but workers just went to other places before going to the banned areas," Juego said.
Sailors’ families will suffer because their breadwinner will not find any job in the Philippines that will pay them as much as their overseas work, Juego added.
"The ban will only cost seafarers their jobs" and the country its competitive edge, he said.
Protection against blacklisting
He added that without a ban, a Filipino seafarer has the right to refuse assignments in hazardous areas. Seafarers can repatriate to the Philippines without being blacklisted by the international shipping industry if they decide to do so.
"Since they cannot be blacklisted they are protected. DOLE has this guarantee already," he said.
The Apostleship of the Sea (AOS) is the Catholic Church’s agency for the pastoral care of people who earn a livelihood from the sea, their dependents and communities.
Its former national director, Scalabrini Father Savino Bernardi, had said he was not in favor of a ban when DFA proposed one in 2008 because this would "paralyze the shipping industry."
460 Pinoy seafarers abducted since 2006
DOLE records show 460 Filipinos manning 38 ships have been abducted by Somali pirates since 2006, and 402 among them have been released.
One Filipino seafarer died while in captivity due to an illness aggravated by the prolonged detention, Ermita added.
Money sent home by overseas Filipino seafarers reached a record US$2.5 billion in the first nine months of 2009, DOLE reported.
Source: gmanews.tv
Other News by Category
General Shipping & Maritime
-
Alarm cleared over sea ice off China coast
-
Swansea-Cork ferry service to close
-
Tamil migrant boat MV Ocean Lady sold at steep discount
-
Concordia passengers, experts dissect cruise ship disaster
-
Ship scrapping industry coming to historic dock
-
More Containers Removed from Rena Wreck
-
Maritime Connector – looking back on 2011
-
Gulf sets plan for Hormuz closure
-
MOL to Scrap 5 Double Hull Tankers
-
Cruise Ship Sinking: Costa Concordia Crew Sues Carnival for $100M
Safety & Piracy
-
Bodies pulled from water after PNG ferry accident
-
Ferry runs aground in Italy snow storm, 260 rescued
-
Papua New Guinea ferry: Fears grow for 100 missing
-
Gas leak cargo ship set to enter Darwin Harbour
-
Cruise passenger airlifted off ship
-
Italy Asks Somalia for Help to Free Hijacked Ship
-
Dozens feared dead after Papua New Guinea ferry sinks
-
Costa Concordia: authorities end search for bodies on stricken cruise ship
-
Mediterranean The Deadliest Sea For Refugees & Migrants - UN
-
Nine crew missing after freighter sinks off Turkish coast
Offshore, Oil & Gas
-
Charles Hendry: North Sea oil industry in independent Scotland risks EU meddling
-
Testing out LNG on Northern Sea Route
-
Underwater oil rig 'factories' planned to beat catastrophic Arctic ice storms
-
Transpetro Reports Oil Spill at Terminal Osorio in Tramandai, Brazil
-
Gazprom and Sovcomflot to arrange test LNG shipment via Northern Sea Route soon
-
Iraq urges Iran to keep its oil flowing through Gulf waterway
-
Iran stores more oil at sea as trade pressure grows
-
Norway's Statoil makes 'substantial oil discovery' in the Barents sea
-
Oil tanker transfer hit by weather again
-
Oil tanker cargo transfer begins in Belfast Lough
Port & Shipbuilding
-
First local cruise ship set for maiden voyage
-
Port of Kiel gets container wayport status
-
China ministry says to bar giant ships from ports
-
BLRT Grupp delivered another gas-powered ferry
-
Rosetti Marino Delivers PSV ‘F.D. Remarkable’ to Fratelli D’Amato
-
Damen to build two ‘Green’ tugs for Iskes
-
Kuwait to purchase nine oil tankers
-
Smit acquires its first ‘Rotor Tugs’
-
Russia scraps three nuclear icebreakers
-
P&O receives £150m Channel ferry
Environment & Technology
-
Oil spreads from wreck of ship off Italian coast, but extent of spillage is unclear
-
Ocean noise pollution
-
Countries adopt UN-backed declaration to protect marine environment
-
More oil spills from Christmas Island ship wreck
-
Kite propulsion powers French fishermen
-
BC Ferries looks to ditch diesel, convert fleet to liquefied natural gas
-
Going, going, gone! Salvage teams dismantle 330ft cargo ship which ran aground in northern France in just one month
-
2012 Leading Edge Green Vessels
-
Bigger Canal + Bigger Ships = Less Pollution?
-
Officials Confirm Light Fuel Near Ship
National (Croatian)
-
Šokantna ispovijest Hrvata kojeg su oteli pirati
-
Vlada: Imenovani pomoćnici ministra i upravna vijeća lučkih uprava Rijeka, Zadar, Šibenik i Ploče
-
Prodaja "3. maja" i "Kraljevice" upitna zbog cijene koncesijske naknade
-
Razvoj riječke luke otvara 9.230 radnih mjesta
-
'EU će pozorno pratiti rekonstruiranje brodogradilišta u RH'
-
Prazna blagajna: MORH odbio njemačke brodove
-
Muzejska podmornica iz Lore - tajno oružje Slovenije
-
DIV nastavlja pregovore za kupnju Brodosplita; Čačić se sastao i s Končarom
-
Novi rekord prometa preko Jadrana
-
Stečaj nad Mediteranskom plovidbom