Vatican calls for respect and protection of rights of
seafarers
(Vatican Radio) The
Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People
has called for the respect and protection of the human and labor rights
of seafarers.
In a message for Sea Sunday,
marked on July 10, Cardinal Antonio Maria Vegliò and Joseph Kalathiparambil,
President and Secretary of the Council expressed gratitude for the far-reaching
work of seafarers in many different fields and spheres of society.
The message also highlights
the precious contribution of seafarers in the recent humanitarian emergency in
the Mediterranean Sea where “crews of merchant vessels have been in the front
line to intervene and rescue thousands of people trying to sail to Europe on
board of overcrowded and unseaworthy vessels, inflatable rafts”.
Please find the full text
of the message below:
Message for Sea Sunday 2016
(10th July 2016)
(10th July 2016)
Seated
comfortably on the sofa in our living room, we find it difficult to understand
how much our daily life is depending on the maritime industry and the sea. If
we look around in the places where we live and work, we realize that most of
the furniture and IT equipment we are using have been transported by ships, our
clothes were shipped in containers from the other side of the world and the
fruits we eat were delivered by refrigerated ships from another country while
tankers are transporting oil and petrol for our cars. Without seaborne trade
the import and export of goods and finished products would not be
possible.
Even when
we decide to enjoy and relax by going in a cruise we do not think that
thousands of seafarers are working hard to make sure that everything will run
smoothly and we will have a comfortable vacation.
Furthermore in the recent humanitarian emergency in the Mediterranean Sea
the crews of merchant vessels have been in the front line to intervene and
rescuing thousands of people trying to sail to Europe on board of overcrowded
and unseaworthy vessels, inflatable rafts.
Almost
1.200.000 seafarers of every nationality (many of them from developing
countries) on board of 50,000 merchant ships are transporting almost 90% of every
kind of cargo. The unforgiving forces of the open sea and of the oceans expose
ships to significant risk, and the seafarers are “risking their life” more than
one way.
The
physical life of the seafarers is at risk because aside from the hazards of the
forces of the nature, piracy and armed robbery, shifting from one area to
another and constantly evolving and adapting to new situations, continue to be
a major threat to the security of the crew. Their psychological well-being is
at risk when after having been at sea for days or weeks they are denied shore
leave and prevented to leave the vessel.
The family
life of the seafarers is in danger because their contracts force them to stay
away from their families and loved ones for many months and often for several
years on a row. Children are growing up without a fatherly figure while all the
family’s responsibilities are on the shoulders of the mother.
The human
and working dignity of the seafarers is at risk when they are exploited with
long working hours and their wages are delayed for months or in cases of
abandonments not paid at all. Criminalization of seafarers is a serious concern
especially considering that in recent years a number of previously considered
lawful seafaring activities have been criminalized particularly in relation to
incidents such as shipwrecks, pollution, etc.
Encouraged by Pope Francis who called the chaplains and volunteers of the Apostleship of the Sea to “be the voice of those workers who live far from their loved ones and face dangerous and difficult situations” , as Apostleship of the Sea we stand at the side of seafarers to reiterate that their human and labor rights must be respected and protected.
Encouraged by Pope Francis who called the chaplains and volunteers of the Apostleship of the Sea to “be the voice of those workers who live far from their loved ones and face dangerous and difficult situations” , as Apostleship of the Sea we stand at the side of seafarers to reiterate that their human and labor rights must be respected and protected.
We would
like also to call on Governments and competent maritime authorities to
strengthening the implementation of the ILO Maritime Labor Convention (MLC)
2006, especially the Regulation 4.4 whose purpose is: To ensure that
seafarers working on board a ship have access to shore-based facilities and services
to secure their health and well-being.
Finally,
on this occasion of the annual celebration of Sea Sunday we would like to
remind to all Christian communities and to each individual how important and
essential are the seafarer profession and the shipping industry for our daily
life. We would like to call on the bishops, especially the ones of maritime
Dioceses to establish and support the Maritime Apostolate as “a visible
sign of your affectionate attention to those who cannot receive ordinary pastoral
care.”
While
expressing our gratitude to the seafarers for their work, we entrust them and
their families to the maternal protection of Mary, Stella Maris.
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