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Another Australian Crew Sacked

MUA crowd

Published Feb 1, 2016 12:43 PM by The Maritime Executive

Up to 100 supporters and Maritime Union of Australia members gathered at short notice outside of the Tomago Smelter in New South Wales on Friday to protest the sacking of the CSL Melbourne crew.

The CSL Melbourne, like the MV Portland, is a coastal trading vessel that has been allowed to contravene coastal trading laws by being granted another temporary license by Australia’s Turnbull government.

The vessel was engaged to carry alumina from Gladstone to the Tomago Smelter, which is operated by Pacific Aluminium, a wholly owned of subsidiary of global multi-billion dollar miner, Rio Tinto. 

A host of speakers turned up to address the crowd outside of the gates of the smelter 20 kilometers outside of the center of Newcastle. 

Newcastle Branch Secretary Glen Williams called on the Turnbull government to immediately revoke the temporary licenses which allowed Rio Tinto to sacked the Australian crew. 

Williams mentioned the vessel that had been chartered to replace the CSL Melbourne was tied to a company which had a suspicious death on board in Newcastle at the end of last year. 

“It has a web of deceit in ownership, it is a classic flag of convenience vessel – it is Greek owned, it’s a Liberian flag…One of the cranes is completely deficient, it has a full Filipino crew, and we have no doubts that we’ll be finding issues with that crew if you went on board an investigated. They will be exploited, they will be stood over,” he said.

“Pacific Aluminium has engaged the lowest of the low when it comes to international shipping operators to replace an Australian crew who are safe, who are productive, who are efficient.”

Assistant National Secretary Warren Smith called on the company to come clean on why they would not renew a contract on the CSL Melbourne, disputing the company’s claims.

“They claim the CSL Melbourne was too big for the trade and then go charter a larger foreign vessel to replace it, I mean come on,” he said.

“We are dealing with corporate thuggery of the highest order. We are being replaced by the most exploited workers in the world. Workers who have no say, workers who can’t go to the boss and say, ‘No, I’m not going to do that job because it’s unsafe,” Smith said.

Newcastle local and crewmember of the CSL Melbourne on the off-swing, Craig Brady joined the list of speakers to offer his personal story.

“I’m the only member of the crew here at the moment because those poor blokes who are back there on board are scared there’s going to be goons running up the gangway if they leave to attend this protest rally. And that’s Australia’s industrial relations system in 2016.

“We should be ashamed that we’ve let it get this far.”

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.