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Demanding better salaries and benefits

H-Line Shipping seafarers threaten to strike

H-Line Shipping comprising the long-term LNG and dry bulk shipping portfolios of the now-defunct Hanjin Shipping, was bought out by private equity investor Hahn & Company in 2014, two years before Hanjin Shipping collapsed.

On 11 July, the seafarers, supported by the Federation of Korean Seafarers’ Union, held a gathering outside Hahn & Company’s headquarters in Seoul. The issue of contention is H-Line Shipping’s management’s decision in June not to overturn a wage freeze that was imposed at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.

H-Line Shipping Seafarers’ Union chairman Kwon Ki-heung: "Although we have made concessions amounting to a wage freeze in the last two years, in June, the management overturned everything that we had already agreed with and said that there could be no sharp wage increase without clear grounds.”

Kwon said that the management did not provide any logic for its decision, despite charter rates in the LNG and dry bulk segment having recovered, and thus, negotiations broke down.

He added: “We need to treat seafarers as best as we did in the past and strengthen the ship management support personnel by increasing the onshore organisation. We need large-scale investment for business transformation, not cost reduction. If the company refuses to do so and sticks to the management based only on shame as it is now, the crew will engage in industrial action.”

Source: container-news.com

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