A recent report by the International
Transport Workers Federation (ITF) showed an alarming 11% rise in the number of
crew abandonment cases in 2023 compared to the previous year.
The ITF reported a total of 132 abandonments, which
is 13 more cases than in 2022.
The Maritime Labour Convention 2006
(MLC) stipulates that a ship is considered abandoned if the shipowner fails to
cover the cost of a seafarer’s repatriation, fails to provide necessary
maintenance and support, or severs ties with them, including not paying
contractual wages for at least two months.
The ITF report also reveals that unpaid wages from
129 cases exceeded $12.1 million, 1,676 seafarers from abandoned vessels
reached out to the ITF, and Indian seafarers were the most impacted with over
400 reported cases.
The ITF has so far secured more than $10.9 million
in owed wages from 60 of the abandoned vessels. As cases continue to be
resolved and more seafarers come forward, the final amount is expected to
exceed $12.1 million.
ITF Inspectorate Coordinator, Steve Trowsdale, said
the rise in seafarer abandonments is “unacceptable”.
“It is a consequence of an industry
where the seafarer can be a throw-away commodity. Seafarers and their families pay the
ultimate price for the greed and non-compliance of ship owners, enduring the
inhuman consequences of a system that compromises their well-being, dignity and
basic human rights. ITF inspectors do an incredible job in holding to account
those shipowners that try to get away with treating seafarers like some sort of
modern-day slaves,” said Trowsdale.
The ITF report showed that Panama, the world’s leading flag state, had the highest number of
abandonments with 23 cases in 2023. Despite being the world’s second and
third largest flag states, Liberia and the Marshall Islands were not among the
eight flag states with the most abandonments in 2023.