Ten Kenyan seafarers who were abandoned in Mozambique by their
employer last August arrived at the Moi International Airport in Mombasa
last week.
They had been abandoned
at Port Pemba in Mozambique by an agent who recruited them to work on
the Comoros-registered general cargo ship MV Nina.
The seamen were rescued and repatriated through diplomatic channels between Kenya and Mozambique.
Their plight highlighted rising cases of maritime impropriety on the eastern seaboard of Africa.
“We
would like to urge seafarers to follow the right procedures while
seeking maritime jobs by ensuring they are recruited by registered
agents. We are also working with the Mozambican government to detain the
ship until all salaries, allowances and penalties paid to free the 10
crew members are recovered even if it involves auctioning the vessel,”
said Betty Makena, an official at the Mombasa-based East Africa
International Transport Federation.
The
crew — who say they are owed more than $72,000 in salaries and
allowances — were detained in the ship for five months by the Mozambican
immigration and their passports confiscated for overstaying in the
country.
Frank Mbotela, one of the rescued men, said
they were recruited by an agent who disappeared once they arrived in
Mozambique and the ship operator refused to honour their work contracts.
Ms Makena said that unregistered agents were taking advantage of the increasing number of unemployed seamen in the region.
“Over
the past one year, East Africa ITF office handled 11 cases involving
crew members abandoned by agents and left to work in deplorable
conditions. We are working with the International Maritime Organisation
to reduce these cases,” she said.
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