Hooked by promises, trapped at sea


Bonded labour: An aerial view of the traditional fishing boats moored at the traditional port in Bungko Lor hamlet in Cirebon, West Java. — AFP

Lured by promises of good money working aboard a foreign fishing vessel, Akhmad left Indonesia and headed out to sea, enduring months of abuse and exploitation while being cut off from the world.

Indonesia is one of the top contributors of labour for the global fishing industry with several hundred thousand migrant workers, according to government figures.

Many are recruited online and assigned to foreign-flagged ships without being properly informed about their rights, leaving them vulnerable to abuse, experts say.

Akhmad, 25, who left Cirebon on Indonesia’s Java island in 2022, said he would get as little as four hours of rest a day while working on a Chinese-flagged tuna fishing vessel.

“There was no rest. (We) must keep working,” said Akhmad.

“It was very tiring. My eyes hurt ... If I was slightly sleepy, I was ordered to wake up and work.”

Crew members had little communication with the outside world and faced regular verbal and physical abuse on board, Akhmad said, recalling the captain once beating a colleague accused of stealing fish they had caught.

Fishermen moor their boat after returning from sea at the traditional port. — AFP
Fishermen moor their boat after returning from sea at the traditional port. — AFP

In addition to tuna, Akhmad said the crew would also catch sharks, cutting off their fins before throwing them back into the ocean.

The practice known as finning is mostly banned across many fishing zones and countries, including the United States and the European Union, but remains a lucrative business activity in some parts of the world.

Jamaludin, an Indonesian man who worked on a different Chinese-flagged vessel between 2018 and 2020, said he was forced to follow the captain’s orders to harvest shark fins despite knowing that it could be illegal.

The 29-year-old said the captain would hurl verbal abuse at him for a delay in installing fishing gear, for example, or if any tool was missing.

Jamaludin showing a photo displaying shark fins during an interview. — AFP
Jamaludin showing a photo displaying shark fins during an interview. — AFP

Jamaludin said he once saw the captain ordering a fellow crew member to resume work despite an injury to one of his hands that exposed his flesh and bones.

“I was stressed, (but) what can I do? I’d already gotten here,” he said.

Jamaludin’s passport was withheld by the captain, and he feared he would face a penalty for quitting early, leaving him little choice but to see out the remainder of his contract.

Both Jamaludin and Akhmad were working on vessels opera­ting off West Africa which unloaded fish in Senegal’s capital Dakar.

Migrant fishers easily find themselves in debt before beginning work, effectively trapped in bonded labour, said London-based NGO Environ­mental Justice Foundation’s head of research, Callum Nolan.

Limited access to the outside world while at sea makes it difficult to seek help, he added.

“These men who are working on these boats are in just desperate conditions, but they essentially have no way out.”

Catch of the day: (Left) Crew members unloading their catch at the Nusantara Fishing Port in Kejawan-Cirebon, West Java.— AFP
Catch of the day: (Left) Crew members unloading their catch at the Nusantara Fishing Port in Kejawan-Cirebon, West Java.— AFP

Indonesian fishing crews usually come across job opportunities on foreign vessels through social media, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation, said Muhammad Kafandi, head of PSP Indonesia, a labour rights group supporting fishing workers.

Many are driven to work abroad because of the lack of opportunities to become “prosperous” at home, said Kafandi.

And while Indonesia has regulations in place to protect prospective migrants from exploitation by crewing agencies, enforce­ment is generally weak, he added.

The Indonesian government is working to improve oversight of recruitment and pre-departure orientation, said secretary-general of the migrant protection ministry, Dwiyono.

He said the ministry’s information campaigns aim at ensuring that “ship crew candidates choose official agents ... understand their rights and obligations, and do not depart through non-procedural channels”.

There are around 300,000 Indonesians working on foreign-­flagged vessels, the foreign ministry’s citizen protection director Heni Hamidah said, citing a transportation ministry estimate.

For workers like Jamaludin, at the bottom line, higher income than what he would have earned in Indonesia outweighed the risks or labour abuse.

“It’s better to just go abroad and earn, for example, 10 million rupiah (around RM2,240 a month), and then have some extra to save,” he said. — AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

INTERACTIVE: Interesting facts about Negri Sembilan’s 36 seats
Court orders health checks as activist’s fast enters third week
One dead, 24 missing after boat sinks near Sulawesi
Publishers of book on Communist Party founder arrested
MP loses seat after jail term upheld
Deadly crossing claims hundreds
‘Don’t deploy sailors on ships through Hormuz’
After KFC disruption, cyberattack hits ice cream giant
Johor exco line-up expected to be sworn in on July 17
Melaka Pakatan reaffirms decision to withdraw from state administration

Others Also Read