Tag: stowaways

  • Four stowaways from Nigeria make it across Atlantic for two weeks on ship’s rudder

    Four stowaways from Nigeria make it across Atlantic for two weeks on ship’s rudder

    The men told the news agency Reuters that they had to ration their meagre food and water for ten days until they were able to survive for four days by drinking seawater.

    They boarded the ferry expecting to reach Europe, but instead they arrived in Brazil, which left them, to put it mildly, startled.

    The guys fastened themselves to the rudder with a rope and constructed a net around it to keep from falling off while the ship sailed over the Atlantic.

    One of the men, 35-year-old Roman Ebimene Friday, claimed that he frequently glanced below to spot “big fish like whales and sharks.”

    Sleep was also not an option. One wrong move could be fatal, and it was hard to sleep anyhow with the sound of the engine running.

    The men’s first concern was to hide from the crew because they feared that if they were discovered, they would be cast into the water.

    Thankgod Opemipo Matthew Yeye, 38, continued, “It was a terrible experience for me.”

    It is difficult to be on board. I was trembling from fear. However, I’m here.

    Liberian-flagged ship On June 27, Ken Wave left Lagos. A fisherman rowed Friday from Bayelsa to the boat, where he discovered three individuals sitting close above the propeller.

    The ship was finally located off the coast of the state of Esprito Santo in the southeast, and the sailors were saved.

    The guys were all in “precarious health conditions,” according to the force, and were saved by federal police officers at the port of Vitoria.

    Each had a different reason for leaving Nigeria, one of the most populous countries in Africa but also one of the most violent and impoverished. The nation has experienced a spike in kidnappings in recent years, and according to one survey, security is one of the top worries among the populace.

    Yeye, a Pentecostal priest, claimed that his farm producing peanuts and palm oil was destroyed by heavy flooding, displacing his family.

    He expressed optimism that one day they will be able to accompany him to Brazil.

    While the other two guys asked to be sent back to Nigeria, Yeye and Friday both requested asylum in Brazil.

    They are not the only men. According to the UN department for human rights, 123,300 refugees and migrants travelled across the Mediterranean to reach Europe in 2021.

    Deaths are on the rise as people brave choppy waves and bad weather, despite the fact that the number has been down for years.

    3,231 individuals at least perished or perished at sea in the Mediterranean and northwest African routes last year.

    The agency said that it had “constantly warned of the horrific experiences and dangers faced by refugees and migrants who resort to these journeys.”

    “Many of them are people running from conflict, violence, and persecution,” it is said.

  • Spanish coastguard finds a clandestine on the ship’s rudder

    Three stowaways were discovered on the rudder of a ship after it completed an 11-day voyage from Nigeria, according to Spanish authorities.

    The coastguard shared a photo of the men sitting on the rudder at the oil tanker’s helm, their feet less than a metre from the water.

    They were taken to a hospital in Gran Canaria, where they were treated for moderate dehydration.

    It’s unclear if they sat on the rudder the entire journey.

    According to data collected by maritime tracking websites, the Maltese-flagged Althini II arrived in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, after a journey of more than 2,700 nautical miles from Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos.

    The men were seen by medics at the dock where they were found, and were taken to hospital soon after, the Spanish news agency EFE said.

    This isn’t the first time stowaways have been found on rudders, which are large blade-like fins found under ships and used for steering.

    A 14 year-old boy who also travelled from Lagos to Gran Canaria in 2020 told the paper El Pais that he spent the entire 15 day journey on the rudder of a huge fuel tanker. He was hospitalised upon arrival, after surviving on salt water and taking turns sleeping in a hole above the rudder with the other men he was travelling with.

    “We were very weak. I never imagined it could be this hard.” he said.

    In another incident the same year, four men were found on the rudder of the Norwegian oil tanker, Champion Pula, after it had travelled from Lagos to Las Palmas. Reports at the time said the men hid in a room behind the rudder during its 10 days at sea.

    The number of migrants crossing on boats from west Africa to the Spanish-owned Canary Islands has risen significantly in recent years.

    The journeys are long, hazardous and deadly. In 2021, the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) recorded 1,532 deaths on the route.