Showing posts with label MLC06. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MLC06. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Approved Maritime Institution In Malaysia

KONVENSYEN STCW 78 SEPERTI DALAM PINDAAN DAN TRAIN TO THE TRAINER

KOD ANTARABANGSA BBMA

KOD ANTARABANGSA SAKP / PKA


Thursday, June 21, 2018

AMENDMENTS OF 2018 TO THE CODE OF THE MARITIME LABOUR CONVENTION,2006 AS AMENDED

Approved by the Conference at its 107th Session. Geneva, 5 June 2018 

Amendment to the Code of the MLC, 2006 Relating to :

Relating to Regulation 2.1 
Regulation 2.1 – Seafarers’ employment agreements 
Insert a new paragraph 7:
7. Each Member shall require that a seafarer’s employment agreement shall continue to have effect while a seafarer is held captive on or off the ship as a result of acts of piracy or armed robbery against ships, regardless of whether the date fixed for its expiry has passed or either party has given notice to suspend or terminate it. For the purpose of this paragraph, the term:
(a) piracy shall have the same meaning as in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, 1982;

(b) armed robbery against ships means any illegal act of violence or detention or any act of depredation, or threat thereof, other than an act of piracy, committed for private ends and directed against a ship or against persons or property on board such a ship, within a State’s internal waters, archipelagic waters and territorial sea, or any act of inciting or of intentionally facilitating an act described above.



Relating to Regulation 2.2
Standard A2.2 – Wages
Insert a new paragraph 7:

7. Where a seafarer is held captive on or off the ship as a result of acts of piracy or armed robbery against ships, wages and other entitlements under the seafarers’ employment agreement, relevant collective bargaining agreement or applicable national laws, including the remittance of any allotments as provided in paragraph 4 of this Standard, shall continue to be paid during the entire period of captivity and until the seafarer is released and duly repatriated in accordance with Standard A2.5.1 or, where the seafarer dies while in captivity, until the date of death as determined in accordance with applicable national laws or regulations. The terms piracy and armed robbery against ships shall have the same meaning as in Standard A2.1, paragraph 7.

Relating to Regulation 2.5
Guideline B2.5.1 – Entitlement
Replace paragraph 8 by the following:

8. The entitlement to repatriation may lapse if the seafarers concerned do not claim it within a reasonable period of time to be defined by national laws or regulations or collective agreements, except where they are held captive on or off the ship as a result of acts of piracy or armed robbery against ships. The terms piracy and armed robbery against ships shall have the same meaning as in Standard A2.1, paragraph 7.

Click (here) to view/download the document

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Indonesia supports Maritime Labour Convention amendment

Jakarta, June 11 - Indonesia has expressed its support for the ratification of the amendment of Maritime Labor Convention (MLC) governing the guarantee of financial rights for seafarers who are victims of pirate hostage or crimes at sea.


"Although so far the number of Indonesian seafarers who have become victims of pirate hostage is relatively small, the MLC amendment is very important considering Indonesia as one of the largest seafarer providers in the world," 

Indonesia has ratified the MLC through the Law no.15 of 2016, which was ratified by President Joko Widodo on October 6, 2016. The Minister of Manpower will officially submit the instrument of MLC ratification to the Director General of the International Labor Organization on June 12, 2017.

Monday, May 21, 2018

Sale Ship to Pay Seafarer’s Lien


The Oceanco build has been held under a maritime lien since it was arrested in March and is now being ordered for sale…

By decree of the Civil Court (First Hall) of Malta on 14 May 2018, the 95m Oceanco-built motoryacht, Indian Empress, will be auctioned for sale at the Courts of Justice in Valetta on Monday 21 May at 12pm noon, on the application of Melita Power Diesel.

The Indian owner of the Isle of Man-flagged superyacht, Vijay Mallya, whose business endeavours include the Force India Formula One team and Kingfisher Airlines, was arrested in London on 3 October at the request of the Indian government, which asked for his extradition to stand trial over an alleged debt of more than 90 billion rupees (£1 billion).

As such, Indian Empress has been completely abandoned since September 2017, leaving the 40-person crew with months of unpaid wages. By the time the yacht was impounded in Malta in March 2018, the crew was owed over $1 million in unpaid wages, with individuals owed anything between $6,250 to more than $92,000.


Representing some of the affected crewmembers was the maritime professionals’ union, Nautilus International, which was instrumental in having the vessel arrested. Nautilus made use of the provisions of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006 (MLC) to secure a payment of $615,000 for the crew via Norwegian protection and indemnity insurance specialist, Skuld, however there remain arrears.

The yacht has been held under a maritime lien since March while Nautilus sought the payment of outstanding wages and other costs over and above the amounts covered by the MLC financial security provisions. The lien has provided the crew with claim over the vessel to the value of the debt owed, but with the owner having ignored multiple requests to settle the debts, the yacht will now be auctioned by the Courts of Justice.

A source close to both SuperyachtNews and Indian Empress said that the crew has been ‘really suffering’ during this tumultuous period and is ‘thrilled’ that the formerly prolific charter boat is up for auction.


Friday, May 11, 2018

ILO: Seafarers to continue receiving wages if held by pirates

Seafarers held captive as a result of an act of piracy or armed robbery against ships will continue to receive their wages and entitlements during their period of captivity under amendments to the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006, as amended (MLC, 2006) adopted by the Special Tripartite Committee of the MLC, 2006 at a recent meeting at the ILO in Geneva. The amendments will be submitted for approval at the 28 May-8 June, 2018 International Labour Conference. ‘Tripartism and social dialogue played a key role in the process of adoption of the amendments,’ said Corinne Vargha, Director of the ILO’s International Labour Department. 


World Maritime University President Cleopatra  Doumbia-Henry, a former ILO official, also welcomed the amendments. ‘These amendments have an important significance in terms of the legal certainty that they provide and also the protection they extend to seafarers and their families when faced with the most horrid of crimes in today’s modern world,’ she said. The text adopted at the third meeting of the Committee states, among others: ‘Where a seafarer is held captive on or off the ship as a result of acts of piracy or armed robbery against ships, wages and other entitlements under the seafarers’ employment agreement, relevant collective bargaining agreement or applicable national laws,’ shall continue to be paid. The MLC, 2006 has been ratified by 86 countries covering around 90 per cent of the world fleet.

Source: ILO (International Labour Organization)

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Union to enforce rights of seafarers onboard vessels

The Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) is set to enforce the rights of seafarers working onboard vessels operating within the nation’s waters.
Towards this end, the union has set up a special taskforce to monitor and compel ship owners and manning agents to comply with relevant provisions of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006 (MLC).
The labour law seeks to enforce the rights of seamen working onboard various merchant ships across the world.



The MLC 2006 is an international agreement of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) which sets out seafarers’ rights to decent conditions of work. It is sometimes called the Seafarers’ Bill of Rights.
The tripartite agreement  with ship owners, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and the union, has not yielded any positive results.
It was gathered that MWUN has also appointed its deputy president general, Comrade Douglas Emobolor, as national chairman of the taskforce while Comrade Dennis Unefeke will serve as the Lagos State coordinator.
It was also learnt that the union has officially written to the regulatory agency,  NIMASA, Marine Police and the Nigerian Navy for clearance with a view to commencing full operations to patrol the waterways.
The taskforce is charged with carrying out on-the-spot assessment with workers aboard ships operating in Nigerian waters. 
Nigerian seafarers are also expected to use the opportunity to air their grievances about the terms and conditions under which they work.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

SHIP DETAINED IN UK AS CREW GO UNPAID

United Kingdom - A freighter which had already been detained following a Port State Control inspection by Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) surveyors in Cardiff, Wales, has been issued with a further detain-able deficiency notice after it was discovered the crew had not been paid for many months. The Malta-registered Svetlana has been in Cardiff since 8 October 2016. The MCA had suspended their inspection  and detained the vessel for a number of deficiencies and returned when the owner claimed to have rectified matters. However, it was then discovered the the Russian, Ukrainian and Bulgarian crew had not been paid wages and a further deficiency notice was issued.


The MCA made a request for the International Transport Worker Federation (ITF) to board the vessel in order to aid the crew and assist with the calculation for owed wages. ITF inspector Tommy Molloy discovered that since the crew had joined, only small, infrequent cash payments had been received. Mr Molloy also discovered that wages were the lowest he had seen for a long time and were certainly below the International Labour Organisation (ILO) minimum referred to in the Maritime Labour Convention 2006. He calculated the wages owed at the ILO minimum level and submitted the claim to the company, along with other amounts for additional work for which  payment had been promised but never materialized. 

The crew had also been forced to purchase their own personal protective equipment such as safety footwear and overalls, before joining, which the ITF says is totally acceptable. The owners were invited to enter into discussion to sign an ITF agreement which would provide acceptable minimum employment standards for the crew. The company responded by accusing the inspector of acting illegally, of blackmail and by insisting they would only pay what was written on contracts, however low. Worse still, the ITF has learnt from maritime welfare organisations in Cardiff that the third officer has now been sacked. Tommy Molloy Commented

click here to read the original articel... 

Saturday, October 22, 2016

SEAFARERS AND THEIR FAMILIES ENSURED OF PROTECTION (ABANDONMENT, DEATH, AND LONG-TERM DISABILITY)

ILO member States have confirmed the amendments to the Maritime Labour Convention ensuring better protection to seafarers and their families in case of abandonment, death, and long-term disability.

Two years after an overwhelming approval at the 103rd International Labour Conference (ILC), it has been confirmed that the Amendments to the Code of the Maritime Labour Convention (MLC, 2006) , adopted in 2014, will enter into force on 18 January 2017.Ratifying Members had been given until 18 July 2016 to formally express their disagreement with the 2014 Amendments. There was wide support for the new provisions, with just two Governments stating that they shall not be bound by the amendments, unless and until they subsequently notify their acceptance.

The 2014 Amendments establish new binding international law to better protect seafarers against abandonment and provide for compensation for death or long-term disability - two crucial issues for the shipping industry. When they come into force, in January 2017, the 2014 Amendments will require that a financial security system be in place to ensure that shipowners ensure compensation to seafarers and their families in the event of abandonment, death or long-term disability of seafarers due to an occupational injury, illness or hazard. Mandatory certificates and other evidentiary documents will be required to be carried on board to establish that the financial security system is in place to protect the seafarers working on board.

Friday, October 21, 2016

NOTIFICATION REGARDING AMENDMENTS OF 2014 TO THE MARITIME LABOUR CONVENTION 2006

Jabatan Laut Malaysia telah mengeluarkan notis (NPM8/2016) bagi pemakluman kepada pemilik kapal, syarikat perkapalan, badan klasifikasi dan persatuan pelaut melibatkan pindaan terhadap Peraturan-Peraturan Konvensyen Buruh Maritim 2006. Pindaan ini akan berkuatkuasa pada 1 Januari 2017.

The Marine Department of Malaysia issued a notice (MSN8/2016) regarding the amendments of Regulations of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006.The amendment will come into force on 1 January 2017. The international rules governing the minimum working and living rights for seafarers (the MLC) have been amended. The changes are known as the 2014 amendments. In summary, the 2014 Amendments update the existing provisions to ensure the welfare of seafarers if they are abandoned by a ship owner, make financial security compulsory for ship owners to cover the costs of maintaining and repatriating abandoned seafarers and expand the existing provisions on ship owners liability for sickness injury or death in service to ensure that contractual compensation is paid in full and without delay to the seafarer or their representative.

Monday, December 21, 2015

China's ratification of the 2006 Maritime Labour Convention


Crew members bundle a rope ladder aboard a ship as it leaves Inchon port, South Korea. China's ratification of the 2006 Maritime Labour Convention will protect the rights of the nation's 620,000 merchant sailors.(Photo/China Daily)
Source: http://www.ecns.cn

China's ratification of the 2006 Maritime Labour Convention will improve conditions in the world's third-largest merchant fleet and attract more people into the industry. 

Last month, China formally completed its ratification of the 2006 Maritime Labour Convention, also known as the Seafarers' Bill of Rights, designed to promote greater adherence to employment law in the shipping industry.

Established by the International Labour Organization, the convention sets minimum requirements for almost every aspect of working conditions at sea, including terms of employment, hours of work and rest, accommodation, recreational facilities, food and catering, health protection, medical care, welfare provision and social security protection.
When the convention comes into force in China on Nov 12, 2016, sailors serving on merchant ships flying the Chinese flag will be guaranteed standard working conditions.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Ship Operating Costs Set to Rise By MarEx 2015-10-30

Vessel operating costs are expected to rise in both 2015 and 2016, according to the latest survey by international accountant and shipping consultant Moore Stephens. Crew wages, repairs and maintenance, and drydocking are the cost categories likely to increase most significantly over that period.
The survey is based on responses from key players in the international shipping industry, predominantly shipowners and managers in Europe and Asia. Those responses revealed that vessel operating costs are expected to rise by 2.8 percent in 2015 and by 3.1 percent in 2016.
Crew wages are expected to increase by 2.4 percent in 2015 and by 2.3 percent in 2016, with other crew costs thought likely to go up by 2.0 percent and 1.9 percent respectively for the years under review. The cost of repairs and maintenance is expected to escalate by 2.3 percent in 2015 and by 2.4 percent in 2016, while drydocking expenditure is predicted to increase by 2.6 percent and 2.3 percent in 2015 and 2016 respectively.
The cost of hull and machinery insurance is predicted to rise by 1.8 percent and by 1.9 percent in 2015 and 2016 respectively, while for P&I insurance the projected increases are slightly lower – 1.7 percent and 1.8 percent respectively.
Expenditure on spares is expected to rise by 2.3 percent in 2015 and by 2.2 percent in 2016, while for stores the corresponding projected increases are 1.8 percent and 1.9 percent. The increase in outlay for lubricants, meanwhile, is predicted to be 1.1 percent and 1.7 percent in 2015 and 2016 respectively, and that for management fees 1.7 percent in each of the two years under review.
The predicted overall cost increases for 2015 were highest in the offshore sector, where they averaged 3.4 percent against the overall survey increase of 2.8 percent. For 2016, it was the tanker sector which was predicted to experience the highest level of increases – 3.4 percent compared to the overall survey average of 3.1 percent. The container ship sector, meanwhile, was not far behind at 3.3 percent.
One respondent said, “We expect costs generally to increase as charter rates creep up, although they will probably lag behind the latter. With charter rates generally low at present, the provision of services to the shipping industry needs to remain competitive, with suppliers reluctant to put up charges too soon for fear of losing business.”
Elsewhere it was noted, “Future operating costs will increase exponentially due to innumerable new regulations, the low competence of seafarers, the high bargaining power of the oil majors, stricter rules regarding maintenance and repairs carried out in ports, the advent of more sophisticated onboard machinery, and increasing consolidation in the marine equipment and services sector, resulting in more bargaining power for fewer, larger companies.”
Another respondent highlighted the fact that ship managers are under increasing pressure, pointing out, “Overcapacity within the markets is driving charter rates down, owners are facing higher costs to finance vessels, and operators are fighting much harder for cargo. Ship managers are now required to look after much more for the same management fees.”
Another still emphasized, “Due to the high financial costs involved in operating a newer world fleet, and to an over-supply of tonnage and depressed freight markets, there will be increasing pressure to maintain or freeze operating cost levels in order for owners to remain competitive. This is likely to change between 2017 and 2020, however, with significant capital expenditure required for regulatory compliance.”
One respondent predicted, “Crew costs will continue to be the main area of increased operating expenditure,” a sentiment echoed by another, who referenced the effect of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006 in this regard to support this supposition. Elsewhere, however, it was noted, “Crew costs will remain stable because the workforce will always be recruited from cheap countries.”
Staggering cost increases due to redundancy in electronic navigation and communication equipment, and increased port dues, were among other issues deemed by respondents in the survey to be likely to result in an increase in operating costs.
Moore Stephens also asked respondents to identify the three factors that were most likely to influence the level of vessel operating costs over the next 12 months. Overall, the most significant factors identified by respondents were finance costs at 22 percent (compared to 21 percent in last year’s survey) and competition also at 22 percent (up from 18 percent last time). Crew supply was in third place with 17 percent (down 3 percentage points on last time), followed by demand trends (down by one percentage point to 16 percent) and labor costs, unchanged at 13 percent. The cost of raw materials was cited by eight percent of respondents (compared to 10 percent in last year’s survey) as a factor that would account for an increase in operating costs.
Moore Stephens shipping partner Richard Greiner says, “The predicted increases in ship operating costs for this year and next compare to an average fall in 2014 of 0.8 percent in operating costs across all main ship types recorded in the recent Moore Stephens OpCost report. Nevertheless, the level of increases anticipated for 2015 and 2016 are low in comparison with many we have witnessed in recent years. Shipping has seen much worse, and prevailed. For example, many of the companies which endured a 16 percent rise in operating costs in 2008 are still operating successfully today.
“It is no surprise that crew wages feature near the top of the predicted operating cost increases for both 2015 and 2016, not least because of the entry into force of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006, which mandates the manner in which seafarers must be paid. For shipping, as for every industry, investment in good people will always be money well spent.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Pendekatan Baru Melindungi Pelaut

Pendekatan baru telah diterimapakai untuk melindungi pelaut yang ditinggalkan, dan penyediaan sekuriti kewangan untuk maksud pampasan bagi kes-kes kematian dan hilang upaya.

Menurut En. Ryder (Ketua Pengarah ILO), pindaan baru keatas MLC06 yang akan di kemukakan ke ILO’s International Labour Conference dalam bulan ini (Mei) untuk memohon kelulusan, mengandungi keperluan wajib ke atas pemilik-pemilik kapal untuk menyediakan sekuriti kewangan bagi maksud pelaut yang ditinggalkan, serta kematian atau hilang upaya.

Dalam masa yang sama, Nautilus International Union yang mewakili 24,000 ahlinya yang terdiri daripada golongan professional seperti Nakhoda, pegawai, kadet, wakil dari pihak industri perkapalan seperti pilot, operator traffik, pegawai laut, pelaut dari bidang O&G dan lain-lain,  menyatakan bahawa 60% daripada respondent merasakan skim pencen adalah menjadi keutamaan, dan 80% daripada respondent tersebut sanggup untuk menyertai skim tersebut.


Apakah pendapat anda, adakah skim pencen pelaut ini penting ?

Friday, April 4, 2014

Pertahankan Pelaut - MLC06



Satu lagi berita sedih yang menimpa pelaut dimana mereka tidak dibayar gaji, tiada makanan di atas kapal, peti sejuk pula rosak, yang paling teruk tiada duit untuk membeli makanan. Laporan daripada pegawai PSC Alan Thomson, yang telah menaiki dan memeriksa kapal Panama – Donald Duckling di pelabuhan Tyne bulan November lepas.

Sebelum menaiki kapal tersebut, beliau telah menjangkakan terdapat ketakakuran atau pelanggaran peraturan di bawah MLC06. Melalui rekod, kapal tersebut pernah di tahan di Gibraltar selama 120 hari, turut dipercayai kapal tersebut berhenti operasi semasa dalam pelayaran sehingga memaksa kru kapal untuk memancing ikan sebagai sumber makanan. Lanjutan itu, kapal tersebut turut ditahan di Las Palmas disebabkan kegagalan majikan untuk membayar gaji kru, kekurangan makanan di atas kapal dan masalah-masalah lain berkaitan dengan peralatan keselamatan. 

Sejak berkuatkuasanya MLC06 pada 20 Ogos 2013, mungkin kita berfikiran bahawa kapal tersebut akan terus ditahan dan diambil tindakan undang-undang, namun apa yang di fikirkan tidak berlaku. Ini kerana tindakan undang-undang tersebut hanya boleh ambil atau dikuat kuasakan 12 bulan setelah sesebuah negara meratifikasikan konvensyen tersebut.

Keadaan sedemikian akan turut berlaku di negara-negara Asia Tenggara. Sehingga sekarang hanya segelintir negara-negara Asia yang meratifikasikan MLC06 termasuk Malaysia. Oleh itu, MLC06 akan hanya dapat dilaksanakan melalui undang-undang setelah 12 bulan dari tarikh ia meratifikasikan konvensyen tersebut. Maka, negara di Asia Tenggara yang pertama yang akan mengigit adalah negara Singapura..... mungkin bulan JULAI 2014.
Kembali kepada isu kapal Donald Duckling, secara kesimpulan kru-kru kapal tersebut telah menerima pertolongan dari segi pengangkutan, makanan serta dihantar pulang dengan kewangan ITF. Kapal tersebut pula ditahan dan kini berlabuh di McNutty Offshore Quay, South Sheilds.

Sekiranya MLC06 sudah berkuat kuasa di sesebuah negara bagaimanakah penyelesaiannya?

Dalam kes ini, mengikut MLC06 kapal tersebut akan jatuh dibawah kategori ‘abandon’.... dan Panama akan menguruskan dan menanggung segala kos ‘repatriation’,  tetapi sekiranya Panama tidak berbuat demikian, UK akan menanggung semua kos ‘repatriation’ kru tersebut. Kemudian UK akan menghantar bil tersebut ke Panama dan menuntut bayaran mengikut peruntukan undang-undang.

Sungguh menarik perkembangan MLC06, untuk berita asal klik disini



Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Keciciran di bawah MLC di samping penguatkusaannya

Peruntukan baru Konvensyen Buruh Maritim 2006 (MLC) - 'rang undang-undang hak asasi' pelaut - telah mula mengigit sejak ia berkuatkuasa pada bulan Ogos 2013.

International Seafarers Welfare and Assistance Network  atau lebih dikenali sebagai ISWAN melaporkan bahawa terdapat lapan kapal dagang ditahan kerana pelanggaran peraturan MLC06 pada bulan pertama penguatkuasaannya, iaitu; tiga di Canada (negara pertama yang melakukan penahanan kapal dibawah MLC), tiga di Spain serta setiap satu di Denmark dan Russia. Dua kapal yang ditahan itu adalah berdaftar di Cyprus, dua di Panama dan setiap satu kapal berdaftar di Liberia, Marshall Islands, Netherlands dan Tanzania.

Walau bagaimanapun, kes baru di Britain menunjukkan terdapat keperluan untuk pengawasan terperinci terhadap pelaksanaan Konvensyen MLC; pemeriksaan kawalan negara pelabuhan (PSC) terhadap kapal milikan Greek, berdaftar dengan Marshal Island, yang dilakukan oleh George di Ellesmere Port, England mendapati bahawa walaupun kapal tersebut mempunyai pensijilan MLC, ia adalah dalam keadaan yang "kotor" dengan 12 penemuan/kekurangan.

Kapal tersebut telah menerima perintah larangan oleh kerana terdapat makanan yang busuk/basi diatas kapal, mempunyai peruntukan makanan yang telah luput tarikhnya dan sarang lipas di galley serta di bilik penginapan kru. Pegawai Kesihatan pelabuhan berkata, keadaan yang kotor seperti itu boleh membawa kepada 'risiko kesihatan kepada anak-anak kapal disebabkan oleh pencemaran makanan'.

Perintah larangan itu kemudianya ditarik balik berikutan pembersihan dan kerja pengasapan. Pegawai pemeriksa ITF, Tommy Molloy berkata adalah sukar untuk memahami mengapa kapal tersebut yang telah diaudit baru-baru ini mendapat kelulusan pematuhan MLC “walaupun terdapat kekurangan yang begitu jelas”. Beliau juga menyatakan bahawa terdapat masalah yang jelas dengan kontrak pekerjaan untuk pelaut Mesir dan Syria di atas kapal tersebut yang sepatutnya diambil tindakan sewaktu proses pensijilan MLC.





Saturday, November 2, 2013

Penahanan Kapal - Ship detention under MLC06

INTERNATIONAL: Canada detains third vessel under Maritime Labour Convention

Panamanian-flagged bulk carrier Kouyou is the third vessel Canada has detained under the Maritime Labour Convention 2006 after officials at the port of Quebec determined that crew were owed more than CAD$51,000 in back pay.
Problems on board the ship were discovered by Gerard Bradbury, an inspector with the International Transport Workers Federation and Unifor union.

Sekiranya terdapat pelaut yang naik kapal pergi ke Canada, maka berpeluang merasai kapal menjalani pemeriksaan terperinci di bawah MLC06. Mungkin pelaut-pelaut juga akan dibayar pampasan seperti berita diatas... 
Sekiranya terdapat syarikat perkapalan Malaysia ingin belayar ke Canada untuk tujuan perniagaan, maka seharusnya bersiap-sedia untuk sebarang kebarangkalian untuk ditahan atau didenda... PSC+MLC06 memang dan nyata telah memberi impak kepada pemilik-pemilik kapal terutamanya kapal-kapal yang belayar ke Europah.
Buat masa ini, Filipina dan Singapura belum menunjukkan taring PSCO+MLC06 mereka... persoalanya "Kenapa?" atau seharusnya ditanya "Bila?" Adakah disebabkan ekonomi negara atau unsur-unsur politik maritim? yang mana paradigma sedemikian "saya tahan kapal anda, sudah pasti anda akan tahan kapal saya... " Malaysia pula masih belum selesai isu-nya di ILO... MOHR apa cerita ?

Friday, November 1, 2013

Pencalonan 'The International Seafarers' Welfare Awards 2014'

LIVERPOOL, United Kingdom, Okt 31, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE melalui COMTEX)--KVH Industries, sebuah pembekal terkemuka bagi sistem televisyen dan komunikasi satelit, telah dinamakan penaja media bagi Anugerah Kebajikan Pelaut Antarabangsa 2014. Media sosial KVH's Crewtoo dan akhbar digital NewsLink, yang bertapak di Liverpool, pembekal utama perkhidmatan kebajikan kru Maritim. Crewtoo dan NewsLink dahulunya sebahagian daripada Headland Media, yang telah diperolehi oleh KVH's Industries awal tahun ini. Headland Media kini dipanggil KVH Media Group. KVH Industries, Inc, mempunyai Ibupejabat global di Amerika Syarikat.

Anugerah kebajikan Pelaut Antarabangsa 2014,  dianjurkan oleh International Seafarers' Welfare and Assistance Network (ISWAN), sebuah organisasi berlokasi di U.K. yang khusus untuk menggalakkan kebajikan pelaut dan pelaksanaan Maritime Labour Convention (MLC) 2006, dengan memperjuangkan pelbagai faedah kebajikan anak kapal.

Anugerah ini adalah peluang untuk pelaut di seluruh dunia untuk menamakan syarikat perkapalan kegemaran, Pusat pelaut kegemaran dan pelabuhan, dan pilihan mereka bagi personaliti kebajikan tahun. Pencalonan untuk Anugerah ini boleh dibuat di www.seafarerswelfareawards.org dari sekarang sehingga 26 November 2013.


  • Adakah anda akan mencalonkan nama syarikat Malaysia dalam mana-mana kategori bagi memenangi anugerah tersebut ?
  • Pernahkah anda menerima sebarang anugerah dari industri/syarikat/agensi yang berkait dengan maritim ?

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Free Download Ship Cooks Training Guidelines (ICS Web)

In Manila today, the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) is launching a new web-based information resource to assist shipping companies to implement the International Labour Organization (ILO) Maritime Labour Convention (MLC). The ILO MLC entered into force worldwide in August although, in practice for many ships, full certification including the preparation of Documents of Maritime Labour Compliance on board individual vessels is not required until August next year.  ICS, operating as the International Shipping Federation (ISF), negotiated the text of the MLC on behalf of maritime employers, with unions and governments, when the Convention was adopted in 2006.
Sila klik disini untuk membaca selanjutnya

Pada 29 Oktober ICS telah melancarkan laman web baru untuk membantu para pemilik kapal melaksanakan MLC06. Natalie (seorang pengarah di ICS) mengatakan bahawa kemudahan tersebut adalah bertujuan untuk membantu menjawab persoalan-persoalan dari pemilik kapal atau pihak berkuasa sesuatu negara akibat dari pelaksanaan MLC06. 

Antara perkhidmatan yang di sediakan adalah seperti; FAQ, status MLC06, dokumen ISO, PSO dan sebagainya. Semua ini adalah percuma... anda boleh memuat turun garispanduan tersebut dengan klik link dibawah;-


FREE DOWNLOAD




Friday, August 17, 2012

The 30th Country Ratify MLC06



Milestone ratifications of seafarers’ labour rights charter



UPDATES.....
GENEVA (ILO News) – On 20 August 2012. Mr Dennis Y Lepatan, ChargĂ© d’affaires, Permanent Mission of the Philippines to the United Nations Office and other International Organizations in Geneva representing the Government of the Republic of the Philippines deposited its instrument of ratification of the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006 (MLC, 2006) with Mr Juan Somavia, Director-General of the International Labour Office. The registration of this ratification marks a global milestone. The Philippines is the 30th Member to have its ratification registered and join the group of the “first 30” ILO countries to demonstrate their commitment to ensuring decent work for seafarer and a level playing field for quality shipowners.

Way to go ILO........ Congratulation Seafarers...

Read more

Senate Ratifies Maritime Labor Convention treaty

The Senate ratified yesterday the Maritime Labor Convention (MLC) 2006, an international treaty which seeks to protect the rights of seafarers worldwide.
Because of this, Sen. Loren Legarda, chairperson of the Senate foreign relations committee, said Filipino seafarers could now expect better working conditions and fairer terms of employment............



Thursday, July 12, 2012

Maritime Labour Convention 2006 Status


12 Julai 2012, Konvensyen Buruh Antarabangsa 2006 iaitu MLC 2006 hampir berada dikemuncak. Kini seluruh dunia menunggu 2 negara terakhir meratifikasi konvensyen tersebut dan seterusnya merealisasikan impian ILO bagi menguatkuasakan MLC06 di seluruh dunia. Adakah Malaysia akan menjadi salah satu 2 negara terakhir tersebut? Ataupun Malaysia akan tunggu dan lihat? Negara-negara lain yang telah menjadi ahli kepada MLC06 menggunakan perkhidmatan RO atau Class untuk pemeriksaan dan pengeluaran sijil MLC, adakah Malaysia akan mengikut jejak mereka? Bagaimana pula dengan kapal-kapal yang belayar di had pelayaran domestik, adakah kapal-kapal ini juga harus memenuhi keperluan MLC06? Walau apapun percaturan kerajaan Malaysia, kebajikan pelaut harus diutamakan. Sudah semestinya, seperti konvensyen-konvensyen lain yang dikuatkuasakan akan melibatkan kos, dan kos ini pertama sekali akan ditanggung oleh pemilik-pemilik kapal. Namun, janganlah pelaut menjadi mangsa pada akhirnya sehingga mereka pula terpaksa menanggung kos tersebut. MLC06 ini mengutamakan Pelaut, maka biarlah pelaut bergembira atas kewujudan konvensyen ini....... pada akhirnya....


Apakah kesan MLC06 ini kepada Malaysia, terutamanya kepada pemilik-pemilik kapal? 
Adakah benar MLC06 ini akan dapat memberi keistimewaan atau kebaikan kepada pelaut?


Popular Posts