http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2016/09/26/2003655947

Exploited in paradise
Fishermen who fled slavery in San Francisco sue boat owner
By Martha Mendoza and Margie Mason  /  AP, SAN FRANCISCO


The Sea Queen II is docked at Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco in November of 
last year. Abdul Fatah and Sorihin, Indonesian fishermen who escaped slavery 
aboard the Honolulu-based tuna and swordfish vessel when it docked at San 
Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf, are suing its owner for tricking them into 
accepting dangerous jobs they say they weren’t allowed to leave.
Photo: AP

Two Indonesian fishermen who escaped slavery aboard a Honolulu-based tuna and 
swordfish vessel when it docked at San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf are suing 
the boat’s owner for tricking them into accepting dangerous jobs they say they 
weren’t allowed to leave.

Attorneys for Abdul Fatah and Sorihin, who uses one name, say in a lawsuit 
filed in federal court Thursday that they were recruited in Indonesia seven 
years ago to work in Hawaii’s commercial fishing fleet without realizing they 
would never be allowed onshore. They have since been issued visas for victims 
of human trafficking and are living in the San Francisco area.

The lawsuit alleges that San Jose, California, resident Thoai Nguyen, owner and 
captain of the Sea Queen II, forced Sorihin and Fatah to work up to 20-hour 
shifts, denied them medical treatment and demanded thousands of dollars if they 
wanted to leave before their contracts expired. Nguyen did not return calls 
seeking comment.

The lawsuit seeks payment for debts the men incurred, fees they paid and 
compensation promised without specifying a dollar amount, and asks for 
unspecified damages for “mental anguish and pain.”

“I want to be compensated because of the suffering I felt on the boat and all 
the suffering I have endured after I got off the boat,” Sorihin said last week 
through a translator at his lawyer’s San Francisco office. “And I hope no one 
will suffer what I have suffered.”

COMMON PRACTICE

The lawsuit comes two weeks after an AP investigation found around 140 fishing 
boats based in Honolulu, including Sea Queen II, were crewed by hundreds of men 
from impoverished Southeast Asia and Pacific Island nations (“Foreign crews 
confined to boats catch Hawaiian seafood,” Sept. 12, page 7). The seafood is 
sold at markets and upscale restaurants across the US. A legal loophole allows 
them to work without visas as long as they don’t set foot on shore. The system 
is facilitated by the US Coast Guard, as well as Customs and Border Protection 
who require boat owners to hold workers’ passports.

AP found some men are paid as little as 70 cents an hour. Others had to use 
buckets instead of toilets, suffered running sores from bed bugs or sometimes 
lacked sufficient food.

In response, the Hawaii Longline Association representing fishing boat owners 
has created a universal crew contract that will be required on any boat wanting 
to sell fish in the state’s seafood auction starting Oct. 1. The group says it 
deplores human trafficking, and that the contract will protect workers.

The contracts let owners continue to set their own minimum salaries, allow 
workers to spend the entire year at sea (15 trips, 10 to 40 days each), and 
reiterate that they must remain on board with passports held by owners.

Cornell University law professor Stephen Yale-Loehr said the new contract 
“reinforces the current deplorable situation by emphasizing that the crew 
members have no real rights.”

“Congress should repeal the loophole that exempts US fishing captains from 
having to provide basic labor protections to their crew,” he said.

PRISON-LIKE CONDITIONS

Here’s what Sorihin and Fatah say happened to them.

They signed contracts promising US$350 a month plus bonuses. They borrowed 
about US$300 to pay an agent in Jakarta. They flew from Jakarta to Singapore, 
then Sydney, on to Fiji and Pago Pago, American Samoa, an exhausting, 
12,500-mile trip.

Because docking is inconvenient and potentially costly, the fishermen had to 
swim from one boat to another before sailing to Honolulu to begin fishing.

Then it got worse.

One day as Sorihin wrestled a shark onto the Sea Queen, a fishing line got 
wrapped around his finger, nearly breaking it off. He said his captain set it 
straight with a chopstick, rubbing ginger and honey on it.

Another time a winch cable snapped, cracking Sorihin in his shoulder; swollen 
and sore, he was allowed a two-hour rest. A swordfish sliced his face as he 
pulled it aboard, according to the lawsuit.

They say the captain was verbally abusive and gave them only torn and worn-out 
gear. There was new protective gear on the boat but the captain said they would 
have to pay for it. Both men asked to see a doctor at various times but were 
told there was no health insurance.

“I knew if I stayed on that boat I was going to die,” said Sorihin in an 
interview.

They worked from 6am to 6pm without a food break. Then, after a meal and a few 
hours’ rest, they’d fish some more. After a few trips, three relatives of the 
captain’s joined them as crew.

“The captain’s nephew kicked me with his feet to wake me up. I never felt safe 
working on that boat,” Fatah said in an interview.

Although there was a toilet on board, they had to go to the bathroom in plastic 
buckets and baggies on deck. And the money, a few hundred dollars a month, just 
wasn’t worth it.

After a few 20-day trips out of Hawaii, they began docking in San Francisco 
about once a month. They would gaze from Fisherman’s Wharf dock over to 
Scoma’s, a classic San Francisco seafood restaurant where diners enjoyed the 
freshest catch.

Then they’d head out to sea again. One day Fatah got washed onto a railing by a 
huge wave. He shivered, cried and cramped up. “I thought, ‘This is probably the 
end,’” he said.

They asked to go home, but were told they would have to reimburse the captain 
the US$6,000 he spent to bring them there.

THE ESCAPE

Finally, they decided to run. It was before dawn, six years ago, when the 
skipper was gone and drunken crewmembers slept. Sorihin and Fatah sneaked into 
a private room and grabbed their passports. They dashed through San Francisco’s 
historic waterfront and eventually boarded a southbound train toward San Jose, 
where they sought help from an Indonesian man they knew of.

“I didn’t think I’d have another chance to survive at sea,” said Fatah. “I was 
really afraid.”

The man took them in and found them help, through the Catholic Church, a 
shelter, social workers and eventually immigration attorneys.

Today they both work two jobs. They clerk at a liquor store, and Sorihin also 
drives a car for hire. Fatah takes inventory at a department store. Neither 
goes anywhere near Fisherman’s Wharf.

Earlier this year, before filing their lawsuit, they looked at photos of the 
Sea Queen II and their former captain.

“That’s him,” said Sorihin, shaking his head when asked if he would take a 
short walk to see the boat. “I’m afraid of this man.”

— Additional reporting by Margie Mason and Sudhin Thanawala

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