• davel [he/him]
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    436 months ago

    The crew, made up of 20 Indians and a Sri Lankan national, has been unable to disembark because of visa restrictions, a lack of required shore passes and parallel ongoing investigations by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and FBI.

    Red tape and racism. I suspect that if they were say Dutch, accommodations would be made somehow.

    • @saltesc
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      216 months ago

      Nope.

      This happens all the time. There have been people stuck on boats for months and even years. Generally they are waiting on something to resolve and the ship’s accommodation is no worse than a local motel and facilities no less than the local town. What’s needed is delivered.

      • @Pretzilla
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        6 months ago

        Yea it’s funny to see all the projection over ‘stuck’.

        These are Mariners who expect to be onboard for a long time, stuck at sea, as it were.

        Mostly nothing to see at sea. Here they have a front row seat to rather interesting activities.

    • @[email protected]
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      176 months ago

      Unfortunately no, this shit happens all over the world, even not in “the west”.

      It’s dumb everywhere. Put a fucking gpa boot on em if you need to, just let em off the boat

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    The entire article seems weird. They say “crew” but mean “property” - it’s the ship that is trapped, the crew could be evacuated at any time, but as spoiled in one line:

    “They’re part of the ship. They are necessary to keep the ship staffed and operational,” Adm Gilreath said. “They’re the best responders on board the ship themselves.”

    And of course:

    The crew, made up of 20 Indians and a Sri Lankan national, has been unable to disembark because of visa restrictions, a lack of required shore passes and parallel ongoing investigations by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and FBI.

    So again, the reason the crew is stuck is that USA don’t allow them offboard.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      So again, the reason the crew is stuck is that USA don’t allow them offboard.

      Yes that seems to be exactly what the article is saying.

      But honestly. This is pretty common world wide with shipping issues.

      Most nations will only issue a temp visa to crew members. Based on the expected exit date of the ship. And even then only to nationalities with some form of visa agreement.

      Most nations are required to meet the laws applied. And when the ship is safe. No emergency law applies. So the only ways a crew could leave. Would be to leave the nation with the ship. As is done in a sinking etc. Or for Congress to pass a law allowing immigration etc to give the passengers visas.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        This is pretty common world wide with shipping issues.

        Crew stranded on a ship after huge accident isn’t that common, i remember even US media calling entire thing “an emergency”. I don’t think we can compare to just regular shipping occurences when ship is in port waiting for load/unload/refuelling.

  • magnetosphere
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    106 months ago

    The number of organizations involved, and their complete uselessness, just makes things even more pathetic and (at times) unintentionally hilarious.

    “…Baltimore International Seafarers’ Center, a non-profit organisation that works to protect the rights of mariners” is an actual nonprofit? Guess what, folks, you’re doing a shitty job! Somebody else is thinking about organizing a cricket match to take these guys to? Seriously?

    I sure am glad there are at least two religious organizations involved, because “thoughts and prayers” always fix everything!