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Water
Women
Seafaring industry’s policies on treatment
of women on troubled water
By WILLIAM
ALZONA
FOUR
graduates of the Maritime Academy of the Asia and the Pacific
are at greater risk than their classmates because they are
women.
University of the Philippines professor Lucia Palpal-latoc
Tangi came to this conclusion after in-depth interviews with
a dozen women seafarers, most of who are working as bar waitresses,
utility, and massage therapists on passenger and cruise liners.
The discrimination of women seafarers, Tangi claimed, begins
from the recruitment stage when women applicants are already
judged based on their youthfulness and beauty, and not on
skills.
"Experience is a plus but not imperative especially when
the applicants have a pleasing personality," Tangi said.
Her conclusion has rattled the male-dominated seafaring industry.
“If there are women seafarers (working in freighters
or tankers), there will be just a handful of them,”
Philippine Overseas Employment Administration director Alejandro
Padaen was quick to reply during the presentation of Tangi’s
paper in September.
Padaen said people should not be misled by government figures
that say there are about 6,619 Filipino woman seafarers, since
most of them work in passenger liners or cruise ships, both
types of which are demanding both men and women to either
serve passengers or run the ship.
Working in freighter or cargo vessels is far different from
working in passenger and cruise liners, Padaen said.
He also said freighter or cargo vessels can only employ between
21 and 23 crew members per sail.
Padaen, however, added that this does not mean that there's
no harassment on board.
He assumed that women are too scared to come forward and report
the case.
“In my three-year stint as director for POEA’s
adjudication division, I encountered just one case.”
Padaen said the case involved a male seafarer stealing the
undergarments of his co-worker on board.
That male seafarer, whom he declined to name, was suspended
without pay for two years because of the violation.
***
THE four female graduates of MAAP, one of the country's premier
institutions for the seafaring industry, last July are just
the latest group to join the increasing number of women in
the seafaring industry.
Established a decade ago, MAAP is headed by the local labor
union Associated Marine Officers' Union of the Philippines,
private sector Danish Shipowners Association, International
Transport Workers Federation, International Maritime Employee
Committee, and the Filipino Association of Mariner's Employment.
All graduates of the school are scholars and handpicked by
the principals themselves. This means that all of their graduates
will be future officers and will not be given menial jobs.
According to school president Eduardo Ma. R. Santos, they
are treating their women students the same as males.
But there are "safeguards" to prevent them from
being sexually harassed by the others, Santos said.
For one, hazing, which he said is usually practiced in other
maritime schools, is prohibited.
Students are segregated according to their floors, and students
are prohibited from going to floors other than their designated
area.
"Women seafarers organize their own symposia on sexual
harassment for prevention," Santos, who is a former Philippine
Navy chief, told the OFW Journalism Consortium.
"But there is no discrimination (of gender). They will
take their shipboard training the same as everyone else,”
Santos said in a telephone interview.
He added that the name of a seafarer accused of sexual harassment
will be disseminated to all maritime agents and vessel operators.
"In the symposia, they always instruct the women to always
lock their doors when brushing teeth. Women are also encouraged
to cite ways they could avoid harassment or abuse.”
According to Philippine Ports Authority executive Siony Flores,
addressing women's concerns on-board a vessel could be as
simple as giving them adequate facilities since they have
a different biological make-up from men.
Flores, a career PPA employee, was the one of those who established
gender and development points in the ports, a sector in the
industry considered dominated by men.
"We're only talking of equity on the available resources
and not equality," the PPA Corporate Communications director
said.
Flores added they encourage women to organize especially since
the government provides them funding for gender and development
projects, as mandated by Women in Development and Nation Building
Act.
The law states that at least 5 percent of the budget of an
agency goes to gender projects.
But private sector initiatives for the protection of women
are a different matter, she admitted, since resources are
“scarce.”
MAAP’s Santos, however, balked when asked if the measures
of the maritime sector to prevent harassment of women on-board
a vessel are already institutionalized.
***
IN her working study titled Pinays On Board: an Exploratory
Study on the Working Conditions of Filipino Women Seafarers,
Tangi said that women have to battle exploitation, discrimination,
and sexual harassment when on board a vessel.
Eleven out of the 12 respondents of the study worked on board
luxury liners and only one worked on board an oil tanker,
Tangi said in an email message to the OFW Journalism Consortium.
Tangi categorized those working in cruise liners and a freighter
vessel as both seafarers, but they are differentiated when
they go on-board as the latter type of vessel requires highly-skilled,
more physically enduring jobs.
A seafarer, she said, refers to any person who is employed
or engaged in any activity on board a seagoing ship navigating
the foreign seas other than a government ship used for military
or non-commercial purposes.
Thus waitresses, utility, and massage therapists are considered
seafarers as well.
The study, however, made apples-and-oranges comparisons.
For one, she opined there is discrimination of salary between
male and female seafarers.
The women she interviewed said they only earn between $50
(for massage therapist) and $1,000 a month as basic salary.
But they can earn between $2,000 to $4,500 a month from tips
alone.
Tangi then compared the salary of male seafarers, which she
said are more into professional, technical, and labor-intensive
job on-board.
A ship captain and the ship engineer, depending on the type
of vessel, can both earn between $5,200 to $10,000 a month,
while the other officers can earn about $2,400 to $8,400 a
month.
"The research depicts the systematic discrimination of
women in the maritime sector. Since women are assigned to
positions or jobs which are reflective or related to their
reproductive and nurturing roles, they tend to receive lower
pay," she wrote.
"Women seafarers manage to augment their income through
tips and through part-time jobs such as doing the laundry
and cleaning the cabins of Western crew members," she
added.
Tangi faced the same hurdle that the government experience—the
unavailability of data regarding women seafarers.
The POEA does not even give details on how many women are
in cruise ships or freighter vessels.
Nongovernment groups like the Church-based Apostleship of
the Sea also do not have records of cases of sexual harassment
on board a freighter
vessel nor discrimination issues of women.
"For sure, they will not come out," said Maria Isa
Yñiguez, AOS’s paralegal aide.
Another Church group Scalabrini Migration Center said that
they do not have any study on female seafarers and all of
the data were from those gathered by POEA.
***
TANGI also added points on the long-time debate on the current
flag of convenience system.
She said that such system also put women more at risk since
FOC-vessels do not give enough protection to women.
International Transport Workers' Federation has been alone
in its campaign for the abolition of the FOC system to protect
the seafarers from exploitation and discrimination.
At the moment, more than half of the world's merchant ships,
as measured by tonnage, are registered under the so-called
flags of convenience, more commonly referred to as "open
registries”. Traditional reasons for choosing an open
register include protection from burdensome income taxes,
wage scales, and regulations.
While this may be true to some open registries, it is difficult
to substantiate generalized arguments against flags of convenience
as the establishment of the system was sought by the vessel
owners themselves.
In about more than 30 FOC states or nations, the most well
known are Panama, Liberia, Bahamas, Malta, and Cyprus. Together
they control about 45 percent of the shipping tonnage, according
to nongovernment group Greenpeace.
"Within the IMO, a treaty only comes into force if the
ratifying states together represent the required shipping
tonnage. That means that, in fact, FOC states have the power
of veto in the IMO," the IMO website said.
Tangi said this is one of the things her study would focus
on.
"I will be expanding my study to include the history
on the deployment of women seafarers. I also intend to interview
women from other departments, including engineers and officers,
if I am lucky," she said, adding that she will also interview
ship owners to make her study more comprehensive.
"I want to include the entire three Bs in my study –the
buyer, the business, and the bought.”
Tangi said her study is supported by the views enshrined in
the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women.
The Philippines, as a signatory to the convention, has the
duty to ensure that women's rights are protected even in the
maritime industry.
“We are not asking for special treatment for women.
We are asking that women should be given an equal opportunity
to integrate and excel in a field that they choose. Women's
rights are inalienable rights and should therefore be upheld
and protected at all times.” end
OFW Journalism Consortium, with the support of the
Royal Netherlands Embassy of the Philippines
This
article is free, but to publish, broadcast, rewrite, or redistribute
this, please write or email the OFW Journalism Consortium
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or ofwjournalism@gmail.com
for permission.
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