Revealed: trafficked migrant workers abused in Irish fishing industry
摘要
日期: 2015年11月15日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer , Not Reported ( 职业介绍所 ) - Recruiter受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 加纳 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Wage Theft , 食物权 , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Debt Bondage , 招聘费 , Restricted mobility , 人口贩运回应
Response sought: 否
后续行动: Eventually the worker escaped by leaving the ship.
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer , Not Reported ( 职业介绍所 ) - Recruiter受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 菲律宾 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Minimum Wage , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Irregular Work回应
Response sought: 否
后续行动: The Guardian reports on the incident but does not mention any action taken.
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月3日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Recruiter , Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 菲律宾 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Minimum Wage , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Irregular Work回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
企业
Tit Bonhomme - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 6
外劳和移民工人: ( 4 - 埃及 , 渔业 , Gender not reported ) , 工人: ( 2 - 爱尔兰 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
死亡 , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Occupational Health & Safety回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 1
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 埃及 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Occupational Health & Safety回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
外劳和移民工人: ( 数字未知 - 地点未知 , 渔业 , Gender not reported ) , Individual: ( 1 - 地点未知 - 未知行业 , Gender not reported )议题
Irregular Work , 殴打和暴力回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 菲律宾 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
心理健康 , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , 食物权 , Irregular Work , 恐吓和威胁 , 殴打和暴力 , Poverty Wages , Restricted mobility回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
企业
Diamon-H Marine Services - Recruiter , Labardie Fisher - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 1
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 菲律宾 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Occupational Health & Safety , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Mandatory overtime , 食物权 , Wage Theft , 种族/民族/阶层/出身歧视 , 人口贩运 , Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Irregular Work , Restricted mobility回应
已邀请回应:是,由The Guardian
回应的外部链接: (查看更多)
后续行动: O’Mahony and co-director of the Labardie Fisher Lenny Hyde, vehemently deny the allegations of trafficking and exploitation. They said the workers' account was completely inaccurate and defamatory. It was untrue, they said, that they were involved in bringing undocumented crew into Ireland to work illegally. They added that they had told the agency the crew would be working from Crosshaven in Ireland. They denied the Filipino worked continuously without statutory rest periods and said the worker had been fully paid for the period he worked. They later added that a second Filipino crew member, who we understand arrived on the same flights as the worker, had confirmed that he had 14 hours sleep every night, and had eaten three meals a day, including a full “hotel dinner” in the middle of the day. (He has now returned to the Philippines, according to sources.) The owners also said the exploited worker was given the best of medical treatment and that they had been assured by police immigration that there was “no question of human trafficking for labour exploitation”. The agency’s Manila-based family member Rommel Turingan told The Guardian it was made clear that the $1,000 was for unlimited hours.
信息来源: News outlet
摘要
日期: 2015年11月2日
地点: 爱尔兰
其他
Not Reported ( 渔业 ) - Employer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 2
外劳和移民工人: ( 1 - 菲律宾 , 渔业 , Gender not reported ) , 工人: ( 1 - 爱尔兰 , 渔业 , Gender not reported )议题
Occupational Health & Safety , Irregular Work回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
African and Asian migrant workers are being routinely but illegally used as cheap labour on Irish fishing trawlers working out of some of the country’s most popular tourist ports, the Guardian can reveal. A year-long investigation into the Irish prawn and whitefish sector has uncovered undocumented Ghanaian, Filipino, Egyptian and Indian fishermen manning boats in ports from Cork to Galway. They have described a catalogue of abuses, including being confined to vessels unless given permission by their skippers to go on land, and being paid less than half the Irish minimum wage that would apply if they were legally employed. They have also spoken of extreme sleep deprivation, having to work for days or nights on end with only a few hours’ sleep, and with no proper rest days. Some migrant workers claim to have been deceived and appear to have been trafficked on to trawlers for labour exploitation, an abuse that would be a form of modern slavery. Our evidence suggests that some boat owners and crewing agencies are smuggling African and Filipino workers in to Ireland through entry points at London Heathrow and Belfast airports, and then arranging for them to cross from Northern Ireland in to the Republic by road, bypassing Irish immigration controls. [article contains statements from boat owners and agencies]