H.E. Captain Ian Finley,
Permanent Representative of the Cook Islands, has been presented with the
prestigious International Maritime Prize for 2023. Captain Finley was honoured
at the annual IMO Awards Ceremony, held in London on 2 December 2024. The ceremony
followed the first day of the Maritime Safety Committee (MSC 109) session,
which is taking place from 2 to 6 December 2024.
Captain Finley was nominated
for the Prize by the Government of the Cook Islands. As a delegate to IMO,
representing Panama and latterly the Cook Islands, he has been an active
participant in the development of virtually all safety, environmental and legal
legislation adopted by the Organization since 1995.
Before handing Captain Finley
the silver dolphin trophy, IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez highlighted
Captain Finley’s long association with IMO and contribution to developing and
negotiating IMO instruments.
“His passion for the maritime
community and his unwavering dedication to advancing its goals have made him an
invaluable presence. There have been few IMO meetings in the past three decades
which have not benefitted from his insight and wisdom,” Secretary-General
Dominguez said.
Accepting the Prize, Captain
Finley said, “I am truly grateful, yet I see this Prize as a recognition of the
work and commitment of so many who I have worked with over the past three
decades.”
He reflected on his 63 years in
ships and shipping: “From the river of my birth to the lands where corals lie,
all gone in what seems just a turn of the tide; Triumph and tragedy, despair
and elation, endings but always new horizons; regrets, none to dwell on, what
an Odyssey, what a life!”
In its statement supporting his
nomination for the Prize, the Government of the Cook Islands cited Captain
Finley’s longstanding work as a delegate to IMO for more than three decades. He
is “a stalwart of Diplomatic Conferences, always striving for consensus and,
when necessary, helping to facilitate the compromises required”. He is an
ex-mariner with “an understanding of and empathy for the challenges that
continue to be faced by seafarers and the obligations of all to ensure their
training, safety and wellbeing”. He has “championed the cause of the Small
Island Developing States (SIDS), promoting enhanced technical cooperation and
capacity building”.
The event also honoured exceptional bravery at sea.