Indonesian fishermen stranded in S. Africa after horror story at sea

CAPE TOWN - Dozens of Indonesian fishermen who spent months stranded in Cape Town's harbour, sleeping in cramped and suffocating quarters, have been taken ashore to a repatriation centre after being stuck at sea for years without pay.

The group of 75 fishermen tell of slavery-like working conditions aboard seven Taiwanese-owned vessels - an ordeal that only grew worse when South African authorities impounded their trawlers for illegal fishing.

The crew spent three months stranded in Cape Town's Table Bay, sleeping crowded together in dirty, airless quarters that reeked of diesel, until they were moved to a repatriation centre in Johannesburg on Saturday.

The captain has been arrested, but the men lacked the legal papers to go ashore, and had been living like prisoners on the trawlers, dependent on the compassion of locals for food.

Some of the men say they were recruited by agents in Jakarta with promises of earning up to US$200 (S$251) a day fishing tuna.

But once on board they were forced to work round-the-clock with little food and no pay.

"You can start at two o'clock in the morning and work all the way to 10 at night. And then two o'clock in the morning you start again," one dejected worker said.

Many of the fishermen did not want to give their names for fear of repercussions from the recruitment agents back home who lived near their families.

After local media began covering the men's story, immigration officials took them ashore, said Miriam Augustus, who had been providing them with food and water.

"I asked the policeman why they are moving the fishermen," Augustus said.

"He said, 'This is what happens when you go to newspapers and say bad things about the country.'" South Africa's fisheries department did not respond to requests for information on the men.

The men said despite their horror story, they are determined to wait for payment, saying they cannot afford to go back home penniless.

"I have a wife and three children at home," said one man.

"After all this time how can I return without even one cent to my name?"

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