The
government has expressed its commitment to supporting and protecting Kenyan
seafarers from exploitation by what it has termed as unscrupulous employers.This is after numerous reports emerged
about some seafarers being abandoned abroad as others lose lives due to poor
working conditions and inadequate safety measures on board vessels.
Addressing
the press Wednesday, Shipping and Maritime Affairs Principal Secretary Geoffrey
Kaituko said they are available to support any seafarer who gets into problems
while working in a vessel. "We are
working closely with relevant agencies including their unions to ensure these
workers get the better terms of service as we encourage them to ensure they
seek opportunities only from credible companies," he said.
He
added: "The thing about the maritime sector is that it is a highly
regulated sector, employers are held to high standards."
A seafarer is someone who is
employed to serve aboard any type of marine vessel.
Kenya,
he pointed out, is a signatory to the Maritime Labor Convention (MLC) of 2006
which obligates it to ensure that its seafarers recruited by other companies
are protected and their welfare safeguarded.
The
Convention, known as “MLC, 2006” came into force on 20 August 2013 –
effectively becoming binding in international law and establishing minimum
working and living standards for all seafarers on those ships.According to Kaituko, Kenya currently has a
total of 11,000 seafarers working for various companies as per
the latest statistics.
The PS
announced plans to conduct a census and streamline the sector by
ensuring they produce the Seafarers Identification Document (SID).
“The
Kenya Maritime Authority and the Immigration department have been given a
directive by the president to ensure we get to produce these documents as soon
as possible so that our seafarers are properly identified wherever they are,”
he said.
Labour
Cabinet Secretary Alfred Mutua has already appointed members
of the Seafarers Wages Council.
Consultations
are in place to appoint the council's chairperson ahead of its inauguration.
Workers
will be presented by COTU representatives Atie Swaleh, David Kibuyu and Bruno
Otiato in the council while employers will be represented by FKE
representatives Naum Tororei, Stephine Obiro, and Bwanaheri Lali.
Mutua
also nominated Hamisi Banton to represent the Ministry of Labour.
Painting a picture of some of the
seafarers, the PS revealed that the government recently evacuated some of them
who had been abandoned in Oman, Egypt and Madagascar by their employers.
In the
most latest incident, he stated that a worker lost his life while working
aboard a vessel. The government has since helped to successfully repatriate the
body back to the country, he added.
He also
used the opportunity to urge the workers to engage with agencies that are
registered to avoid a situation where their welfare may be compromised.