Maritime Workers Journal, Winter 2022

Page 24

INTERNATIONAL

SEAFARERS under fire in Black Sea Unions condemn invasion and ban Russian ships as merchant marine casualties grow

A

27-year-old ship’s engineer from Bangladesh, Hadisur Rahman, became the first crew fatality of war in Ukraine after an artillery shell struck the bridge of his cargo ship, the Banglar Samriddhi, in the port of Olvia on March 2. He will not be the last. The same night, six seafarers were rescued from the Helt, an Estonian cargo vessel that sank after an explosion near Odessa. The Japanese-owned MV Namura Queen was hit by a missile which Ukraine authorities said was fired by Russian forces. One of the 21 Filipino seafarers was injured and the ship sailed from Ukrainian waters to Turkey for damage assessment, the owners said. The Turkish owned Yass Jupiter cargo vessel and the Moldovan flagged Millennial Spirit have also come under fire, Reuters reports. Crew on the Millennial Spirit were Russian. Two were seriously injured. The International Transport Workers’ Federation is calling for an immediate ceasefire by all parties and

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for diplomatic solutions in line with the United Nations. Both the ITF and the MUA have condemned the Russian invasion. Maritime Union of Australia National Secretary Paddy Crumlin has written to the Australian Prime Minister calling for Asia-Pacific sanctions and a national embargo on all Russian registered or owned shipping and cargo. “Workers around the world are defiant in opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” Crumlin, who is also ITF President, said. Unions worldwide are pushing to widen bans on Russian ships from their ports, potentially black listing more than 1700 vessels. Major shipping lines have enacted trade embargoes with Russia. The

two largest shipping companies in the world by TEU capacity – Maersk Line and Mediterranean Shipping Company – have both suspended container shipping to Russia. On many merchant ships, Ukrainian and Russian seafarers work side by side in peace, supporting one another in one of the most dangerous and demanding industries in the world. Meanwhile in Italy, Union Sindacale di Base (USB) members at the port of Livorno declared “maximum solidarity” with workers at Galileo Galilei airport in Pisa who refused to load crates of weapons, ammunition and explosives destined for Ukraine. The crates were disguised as “humanitarian aid” and originated from US/NATO bases in Poland, USB said. www.mua.org.au


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Articles inside

I bloody hope Labor gets in

2min
page 52

'Gamil' means 'No'

1min
pages 50-51

Election 2022: Opportunity of a lifetime

5min
pages 48-49

Veterans call for 'people power' election drive

5min
pages 46-47

In Memoriam

12min
pages 42-45

Book Review: FACTS* and other lies

2min
page 41

Book Review: True Blue

9min
pages 36-39

150 Years of Struggle

6min
pages 34-35

A meeting of Presidents

1min
page 33

US Regulators target carrier fees

4min
pages 32-33

Morrison Fails Working Women

2min
pages 30-31

Climate Strike

2min
page 29

$52B Offshore Clean Up Underway

10min
pages 26-28

Outrage Over P&O Ferries Sacking

3min
page 25

Seafarers under fire in Black Sea

3min
pages 24-25

War Pigs

5min
pages 22-23

Poetry from the Picket

8min
pages 20-21

Was the Moorebank tender corrupt?

3min
page 19

Michaelia's Mob

3min
page 18

Rogue Employer

4min
pages 16-17

Patrick Deal Brokered

5min
pages 14-15

Shipping monopolies jeopardise Australian trade

4min
pages 12-13

Why We're Voting Labor

2min
pages 10-11

Strategic Fleet

9min
pages 6-9

Logging On

8min
pages 4-5
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