In Kaliningrad the inspectors of the International Transport
Workers' Federation (ITF) checked the
working and living conditions
of seafarers on the
board of thousand and one ships over a decade. By the way, one hundred
of ships per year is a norm
for ITF inspector in any port of the
world.
The most interesting
point was that officials
had to visit the Marshall Islands-flagged Navin Kestrel (IMO 9381811). The ship caught
their attention in Kaliningrad in 2011. At the time
the crew consisted of Russian and Cape Verdian seafarers. There were wage arrears
and the seafarers demanded to back home. The situation was
in the spirit of
the flag of convenience. The labour
dispute were resolved after the
strike and negotiations. Navin
Kestrel with another crew on board
steered the South course and
got out of the
ITF and SUR sight after crossing
the Gibraltar.
Now the ship has returned to Kaliningrad. She has a new owner, her crew consists
of Turkish and Georgian seafarers who are paid the
other wages. For example, a
seaman receives $1,100.
Reference: The ITF
office in Russia includes five
inspectors: the ITF coordinator
in Russia Sergei Fishov and
the port inspectors, among them are Kirill
Pavlov (St. Petersburg), Vadim Mamontov (Kaliningrad), Olga Ananina (Novorossiysk) and Pyotr Osichansky (Vladivostok). In 2017 the
ITF inspectors in Russia returned to seafarers $4,689,367 of unpaid wages and
checked 521 vessels.
Vadim Mamontov, ITF inspectorin Port of Kaliningrad and the chairman at
the Kaliningrad Regional Organizationof
theSeafarers' Union of Russia (SUR
KRO).