The fishermen
Summary
Date Reported: 15 Jun 2023
Location: United Kingdom
Companies
MFV Strathmore - Supplier , Tesco - Buyer , ASDA - Buyer , Morrisons - BuyerAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 2 - Philippines , Fishing , Men , Documented migrants )Issues
Personal Health , Deaths , Occupational Health & Safety , Injuries , Harassment (other than sexual) , Minimum Wage , Wage Theft , Intimidation , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Restricted access to medicines , Restricted mobilityResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Journalist; Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
External link to response: (Find out more)
Action taken: MFV Strathmore released a statement to the FT addressing or denying several of the allegations; the supermarkets provided statements to the Resource Centre. UK law firm Leigh Day has initiated a judicial review against the Home Office, arguing the visa arrangements are in breach of European human rights law. The Seafood Ethics Action (SEA) Alliance reportedly launched an investigation into the claims.
Source type: News outlet
Summary
Date Reported: 15 Jul 2023
Location: United Kingdom
Companies
Young's Seafood - SupplierAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( Number unknown - Location unknown , Fishing , Gender not reported , Documented migrants )Issues
Occupational Health & Safety , Wage Theft , Restricted mobility , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure TimeResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
Action taken: The Resource Centre invited Young's Seafood to provide information regarding the allegations in the report, investigation and remedy of any abuse and human rights due diligence undertaken regarding working conditions at suppliers. Its statement can be read in full on our website.
Source type: News outlet
Summary
Date Reported: 15 Jun 2023
Location: United Kingdom
Companies
Eagle Clarc Shipping Philippines - Recruiter , Tesco - Buyer , ASDA - Buyer , Morrisons - Buyer , Kearney Trawlers - SupplierAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 2 - Philippines , Fishing , Men , Documented migrants )Issues
Occupational Health & Safety , Injuries , Wage Theft , Restricted access to medicines , Right to Privacy , Intimidation , Minimum Wage , Mental Health , Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Restricted mobilityResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Journalist; Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
External link to response: (Find out more)
Action taken: Kearney Trawlers released a statement to the FT; the supermarkets provided statements to the Resource Centre. Eagle Clare Manning agency did not respond to request for comment. UK law firm Leigh Day has initiated a judicial review against the Home Office, arguing the visa arrangements are in breach of European human rights law. The Seafood Ethics Action (SEA) Alliance reportedly launched an investigation into the claims.
Source type: News outlet
Summary
Date Reported: 15 Jun 2023
Location: United Kingdom
Companies
Whitby Seafoods Ltd. - SupplierAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( Number unknown - Location unknown , Fishing , Gender not reported , Documented migrants )Issues
Wage Theft , Restricted mobility , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Occupational Health & SafetyResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Journalist; Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
External link to response: (Find out more)
Action taken: The Resource Centre invited Whitby Seafoods to provide information regarding the allegations in the report, investigation and remedy of any abuse and human rights due diligence undertaken regarding working conditions at suppliers. Its statement can be read in full on our website. The FT also reported comments from the company.
Source type: News outlet
... in recent decades, the domestic fishing industry has become dependent on ["transit visas"]. As a result, many staples of local fish and chip shops, as well as supermarkets, are the product of a largely invisible workforce. While British consumers imagine their seafood is caught by a local captain birdseye, much of it is, in fact, fished by low-paid migrants employed through an immigration loophole that leaves them vulnerable to exploitation...
This story of four of those men is based on extensive first-hand accounts, corroborated by medical records, contemporaneous messages, photographs, employment contracts, and vessel-tracking data...
Seafood from the boats owned by Quezon’s and Garay’s employers is sold in major British supermarkets, including Asda, Tesco and Morrisons. Young’s Seafood and Whitby Seafoods, two of the largest producers in the UK, have processing facilities in the harbour. The supermarket chains pledged to investigate the allegations in this story. A spokesperson for Whitby called them “deeply concerning” and said the company was awaiting the outcome of an independent investigation...
In separate statements, representatives for MFV Strathmore Ltd, Kearney Trawlers and ANIFPO disputed aspects of the accounts in this article. MFV Strathmore’s spokesperson wrote that “all its crew are treated as valued and respected members of the team.” Kearney Trawlers’s statement noted the company is “proud of its crew” and “fortunate that almost half their crew are from the Philippines, a nation of highly regarded seafarers.”...
... I spoke to other migrant crew elsewhere in the UK who said they had been required to work on land or were otherwise mistreated. The International Transport Workers’ Federation, Stella Maris and the Fishermen’s Mission shared more than a dozen recent accounts of alleged abuse involving employers elsewhere not detailed in this article, including several which are the subject of modern slavery investigations...
Kearney Trawlers and MFV Strathmore said crew are paid according to industry norms, around £25,000 per annum, including food allowances and bonuses. But according to crew on the companies’ boats, as well as signed contracts they showed me, they were making roughly £14,000 a year...
Boat owners are legally required to report accidents to the MAIB “by the quickest means possible”, according to the agency’s website. But Garay’s injury would not be reported for 60 days; Quezon’s would go unreported for 189 days. Kearney Trawlers said its protocol at the time prioritised medical treatment and “has been revised to ensure that any serious accident or injury is reported to the MAIB as soon as practicable”.
MFV Strathmore denied that injured crew undertook “inappropriate manual fishing work” and said it facilitated travel to medical appointments.)
Kearney Trawlers said that Quezon’s manning agency, Eagle Clarc Shipping Philippines Inc., agreed to repatriate him and that it “was advised that the only remaining care he required was physiotherapy [which] could be properly concluded in the Philippines”. Eagle Clarc did not respond to a request for comment...