ITF PRESENTATION 12 SEPTEMBER 2018 KEN FLEMING

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Transcription:

ITF PRESENTATION 12 SEPTEMBER 2018 North Western Water Advisory KEN FLEMING Council

On or about 15 February 2016, the Atypical Migrant Workers Scheme for Non-European Economic Area Crew ( the Scheme ) in the Fishing Fleet was adopted by Ireland. The Scheme was introduced following reports of trafficking in human beings and exploitation of migrant fishers in the Irish fishing fleet.

The Scheme has no legislative basis. It was adopted administratively by the Minister for Justice and Equality. A summary of the conditions of the Scheme can be found on the Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service ( INIS ).

The Scheme if applied correctly provides for most if not all of what an employee would expect while employed here in Ireland. A 39 hour week- overtime pay for all the extra hours worked, holiday pay etc, protection from all Irish labor legislation.

Lack of enforcement. No prosecutions of boat owners for breaches of workers rights Single figure prosecutions for not keeping proper rest records WRC has recovered less than 10,000 Euro since June 2016

While inspecting fishing vessels the ITF has uncovered multiple breaches of the Scheme including fishers working excessive hours and being paid below the Irish minimum wage. Details of breaches were forwarded to the relevant authorities, but no action was ever taken.

Since the introduction of the Scheme: 15 fishers who held permits to work in Ireland have been identified by the Garda National Protective Services Bureau as potential victims of human trafficking. 6 fishers who did not hold permits have also been officially identified as potential victims.

The numbers mentioned in the previous slide were identified by the ITF with very few resources. Some vessels have been passed by WRC which the ITF has found to be systematically abusing non- EEA fishers. Following a PQ to the Michael Creed, the Minister responsible, in early 2018, he stated that the scheme was working well and needed time to settle in.

Those individuals, and several others (160 complaints since July 2017) have reported working manifestly excessive hours with little opportunity to rest, being paid well below minimum wage (and below levels promised prior to employment), being threatened with and suffering physical abuse and being threatened with dismissal.

1. Working up to 22 hours per day. 2. Paid for 39 hours per week. 3. Denounced to authorities. 4. Racial abuse 5. Religious needs ignored. 6. Controlled by employer. 7. Deprived of food. 8. Forced to engage in illegal acts such as hiding fish caught over quota 9. Forced to sign off on falsified working time records

Outside Agencies have remarked on the performance of Ireland.

The Trafficking in Persons Report ( TIP Report ) 2018, published by the United States Department of State, downgraded Ireland over its human trafficking record. The TIP report concluded that Ireland was not compliant with the minimum standards required under US legislation. It stated that Ireland s efforts in this regard were not serious and sustained and pointed to the state s failure to secure a single conviction under anti-trafficking legislation introduced in 2013. The fishing industry is mentioned several times within the report.

In September 2017, the Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (GRETA) published its report concerning the implementation of the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings by Ireland. The report notes some of the failings of the Scheme and recommends that Ireland review the application of the Atypical Working Scheme in the fisheries industry with a view to ensuring that it contains sufficient safeguards against trafficking and exploitation of fishermen

In December 2017, the Oireachtas Committee on Business, Enterprise and Innovation published a report entitled the situation of non-eea crew in the Irish Fishing Fleet under the Atypical Worker Permission Scheme. It recommended a number of changes to the Scheme, along with measures that could reduce the risk of trafficking and forced labour. To date, none of the recommendations have been adopted.

In addition, a report published in December 2017 by the Migrant Rights Centre Ireland (MRCI) criticised the lack of enforcement and availability of information in respect of employment rights for migrant workers. Its report found that over sixty-five percent of migrant fishers in Ireland worked more than one hundred hours a week for which they were paid, on average, less than three euros an hour. The report also found that one in four migrant workers had experienced physical and/or verbal abuse.

The ITF has made an application to the High Court to injunct the Irish Government and close down the scheme. As these proceedings are in their early stages, it would be inappropriate to comment further on them.

3 https://www.coe.int/en/web/anti-humantrafficking/ireland 4 https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/committees/32/businessenterprise-innovation/documents/ 5 https://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2018/ 6 https://www.mrci.ie/press-centre/severe-exploitationpersists-on-irish-fishing-boats-says-new-report-11122017/

The ITF believes that the Scheme must be closed to prevent further abuse of migrant fishers in Ireland. The continuation of the Scheme represents a failure on the part of the Irish government to prevent, suppress and combat instances of human trafficking and forced labour, or to prosecute those responsible for these offences.

THANK YOU ANY QUESTIONS