Worker exploitation rife in fishing industry

By Councillor Michael O’Brien

The Guardian newspaper recently published a major exposé about the systematic super exploitation of non-EU migrants in the fishing industry in Ireland. However this situation was brought to the government’s attention some years earlier by the office of Joe Higgins TD among others.

In early 2013, at the prompting of Ken Fleming of the International Transport Federation, parliamentary questions were submitted by Joe Higgins to the various responsible Ministers.

Government have questions to answer

Specifically in one PQ we put this issue to Minister for Jobs Enterprise and Employment, Richard Bruton and raised the idea of allowing migrant crew in this situation the right to make themselves known to the authorities without fear of prosecution or deportation as recommended by Ken Fleming and the ITF. We were given a perfunctory response from Minister Bruton which clearly did not treat seriously the belief that the industry was rife with undocumented crew working in dangerous conditions.

Minister Bruton furthermore in his answers attributed to his colleague the then Minister for Justice Alan Shatter, the most callous attitude towards crewmen in this situation effectively saying that the state had no obligation to concern itself with the welfare of these workers. Such a response would have only served to reinforce the fear of migrant crewmen rather that assist in bringing it fully out into the public domain and properly enforcing safe work practices.

Action needed now

It’s to this government’s and the Irish media’s shame that it took a further two and a half years and a UK newspaper to carry the story to force this issue into the headlines here and onto the political agenda. Action is needed now and an amnesty must be declared for undocumented migrant workers in the fishing industry working in dangerous conditions. The trade union movement must take action to ensure this happens.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Schools Admissions policies: Separate Church and State

Next Article

Can Sinn Féin deliver for the 99%?

Related Posts

Fight cuts in Dublin Bus and Bus Eireann

SHOCK, ANGER and disbelief probably best describe the feelings of Dublin Bus workers at the announcement that 290 workers are to be sacked over the next while. Along with the job losses, over 120 buses, nearly ten per cent of the fleet, are to be axed. On top of this, the company is refusing to pay the increases due under the last partnership deal. Bus Eireann are using similar arguments to sack 300 workers.

Read More

Otis Lifts attempting to smash union

Workers in Otis Lifts, members of the Technical Engineering Electrical Union, are now into the second week of their strike action. The strike was undertaken as a response to the companies’ refusal to accept a Labour Court recommendation with regard to redundancies within the company. Initially the company sought thirteen redundancies and eleven workers were prepared to volunteer.