14.5 C
Hamburg
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Home News ITF recovers almost US$120 million in unpaid wages for seafarers since 2020

ITF recovers almost US$120 million in unpaid wages for seafarers since 2020

The International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) inspectors recovered US$118,529,663 in wages owed to seafarers between 2020 and 2022, according to data released on World Maritime Day.

“While we are proud that our inspectors have been successful in recovering almost US$120 million for seafarers in the last three years, it’s unfortunate that we need to address wage underpayments at all. We would prefer to see all seafarers paid in full, and paid on time in the first place,” stated David Heindel, ITF Seafarers’ section chair and president of the Seafarers International Union.

ITF inspectors are officials who board ships to educate seafarers on their rights, detect violations of crew contracts, national laws, or international conventions, and then work with authorities to ensure that rights are implemented. Inspectors from the ITF work out of 111 ports in 56 countries.

In 2022, seafarers reported 2,199 violations of contract to the ITF, with nonpayment of salaries being the most widespread reason.

“For some seafarers, a shipowner might miss a pay date here or there, but others can go months without receiving their salaries. ITF inspectors, supported by our seafarer and docker union affiliates, are here to help crew stand up for their rights wherever they find themselves in need of support,” noted David Heindel.

Also, in the last year, ITF inspectors conducted 8,667 ship inspections across the world with 1,878 of these being in response to ITF calls, emails, or messages requesting assistance from seafarers.

An additional 3,771 inspections were carried out as part of the inspectors’ continuous system of routine and responsive inspections to ensure ships flagged to Flags of Convenience (FOC) registries and comply with the same international requirements as vessels flagged to national flags.





Latest Posts

ORBCOMM unveils new container visibility tool

ORBCOMM has announced the launch of CrewView, an onboard visibility solution designed to give vessel crews real-time access to data from smart refrigerated and...

SAAM-Enap partnership: Latin America’s first electric tug en route to Chile

Latin America’s first fully electric tugboat has officially set sail from Tuzla, Turkey, on a 45-day journey to Puerto Montt, Chile. From there, it will...

Singapore and France sign enhanced maritime partnership agreement

French Minister for Transport Philippe Tabarot and Singapore’s Acting Minister for Transport and Senior Minister of State for Finance Jeffrey Siow signed an Enhanced...

CMA CGM, DP World Ramp Up Investment Amid Global Trade Turbulence

As global trade fragments under the weight of geopolitical tensions, French shipping group CMA CGM and UAE-based logistics company DP World are positioning themselves...

AD Ports establishes Tbilisi Intermodal Hub in Georgia

AD Ports Group has announced the inauguration of the first phase of Tbilisi Intermodal Hub, Georgia's first modern, bonded container and intermodal terminal, and...
error: Content is protected !!