Skip to main content

Twelve Fishers Abandoned Aboard Portuguese Vessel

news Press Release

Fishers from Indonesia and Angola working on the Novo Ruivo left without pay for eight months

Twelve fishers working aboard the Portuguese-flagged fishing vessel Novo Ruivo (IMO 8734671) have been abandoned and left without pay for the past eight months.  

The fishers, six from Indonesia and six from Angola, are owed USD68,420. They are currently aboard the vessel in Mindelo, Cape Verde, where they are stranded with no clear timeline for payment or repatriation. 

“This is a horrific situation being faced by this innocent crew of fishers,” said Gonzalo Galan, ITF Inspector, Fishers' Support Coordination, at the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF).  

“After eight months without pay, the fishers have been left completely unable to support themselves and their families back home. They are desperately calling for the only just solution possible: for them to finally receive their wages and to be repatriated home safely and without delay.” 

The vessel is owned by Somar – Produtos do Mar Lda, a Portuguese company with Spanish funding. The shipowner, who cites financial hardship, has repeatedly promised the crew that their long-overdue wages would be paid, but these assurances have proven false.  

The ITF has added the case to the IMO/ILO Abandonment of Seafarers Database. 

The case constitutes a serious breach of the ILO Work in Fishing Convention, C188, which Portugal ratified in 2019, making its provisions fully applicable to Portuguese-flagged fishing vessels. Under C188, fishing vessel owners are required to provide regular payment of wages, ensure decent living and working conditions, and guarantee the safe repatriation of fishers. 

Galan added: “It is extremely concerning that these situations continue to occur on European-owned vessels. Despite national and international regulations, European ships are repeatedly involved in cases where we see abuses against fishers from outside Europe – often from the Global South – who are left completely defenceless with no effective mechanisms to protect their rights.” 

The ITF is urging European fishing industry employers to sit down at the bargaining table to negotiate a collective agreement that provides real protection for foreign crews working on vessels owned by European capital. 

ENDS 

 

If you are a fisher in need of support, contact the ITF via our Facebook Fishers' Support page or email: fishsupport@itf.org.uk 

Notes to Editors  

About the ITF:  The International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) is a democratic, affiliate-led federation recognised as the world’s leading transport authority. We fight passionately to improve workers’ lives, connecting more than 730 affiliated trade unions from over 150 countries to secure rights, equality and justice for workers globally. We are the voice for more than 16.5 million transport workers across the world.   

Media contact: Mark Dearn +44 7738 832 413 media@itf.org.uk  

 

 

ON THE GROUND