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Under Fire in the Strait of Hormuz

Stories from workers under fire, stuck or abandoned on ships in the Strait of Hormuz. When war broke out it exposed the precarious conditions some seafarers work in.

Sunil was 26 when he went to work on a ship for the first time. He travelled from Rajasthan, India to a port in Dubai for a job on an oil tanker. When he boarded the ship, he met Dalip, who was from a neighbouring village. They helped support each other when they felt homesick, working on a ship so far from home for the first time. But then a few weeks into their contract, Sunil heard a loud bang and felt the ship shake. He ran to the deck and saw oil spreading across the floor and smoke rising from the engine room. Someone told him an Iranian missile had hit their ship. As the oil spread, Sunil feared for his life and jumped into the ocean. He stayed calm until he realised Dalip wasn’t there...

Kayleen Devlin tells the story of three men who were working on ships as the US-Israel war with Iran unfolded. Their stories reveal a system where workers can be recruited through unlawful practices, sent onto ships with little protection, and sometimes left to fend for themselves. Most seafarers come from India and are often offered wages far below international guidelines to work on the cargo ships and oil tankers that keep our day to day lives moving and our economies afloat.

Presenter: Kayleen Devlin
Producer: Phoebe Keane
Translation: Kinjal Pandya
Sound design: Neil Churchil
Editor: Richard Vadon

(Image: Smoke billows from the Sky Light. Credit: Sunil Puniya)

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28 minutes

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