From Maritime Executive:

For the second time, the ITF has helped a Russian crew anchored south of Skagen in Denmark.

After months of wrangling, $324,370 in unpaid wages have now been paid to the crew of 19 from the Turkish/Russian tanker Natig Aliyev. Danish authorities have now released the ship which had been at anchor for around eight months.

The owed wages were paid by the new charterer of the ship, said a spokesperson for the Danish labor organization CO-Sea. “This is the second time within six months that ITF has had to put its foot down to ensure payment of the ship’s crew, and it is the third time within a year that the same Turkish/Russian shipping company, Palmali Shipping, has been caught red-handed in Denmark violating the international convention to secure the rights of seafarers, the MLC,” asserts the organization.

In March, Danish ITF inspector Morten Bach intervened to secure wages owed to the crew dating back to November last year – $250,000 dollars. At the time the situation on board the anchored ship was extreme, as the crew were left without provisions. The situation was brought to the attention of the ITF when the crew sent an anonymous cry for help to Bach.

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