Indian Sailors Stuck In Chinese Waters Due To COVID-19 To Return On January 14
New Delhi: The 23 Indian sailors who are stuck in China are set to return on January 14. The crew aboard the cargo ship MV Jag Anand were stuck in China after anchorage in Chinese waters as they were not allowed to unload their cargo.
Confirming the news Union Minister of ports, shipping and waterways Mansukh
Mandaviya informed of the development. In a series of tweets he said: "Our
seafarers stuck in China are coming to India. Ship MV Jag Anand, having 23
Indian crew, stuck in China is set to SAIL toward Chiba, Japan, to carry out
crew change, will reach India on 14th January."
He said this could be made possible only due to the strong leadership of Prime
Minister Narendra Modi.
In another tweet he acknowledged the help by Great Eastern Shipping Company,
saying, "I deeply appreciate the humanitarian approach of Great Eastern
Shipping Company the towards the seafarers and standing by them in this
crucial time!"
Our Seafarers stuck in China are coming back to India!
Our Seafarers stuck in China are coming back to India!
— Mansukh Mandaviya (@mansukhmandviya) January 9, 2021
Ship M. V. Jag Anand, having 23 Indian crews, stuck in China, is set to sail toward Chiba,Japan to carry out crew change, will reach India on 14th January.
This could only happen due to strong leadership of @NarendraModi ji
Earlier, the External Affairs Ministry in a statement said that two cargo
vessels with a total of 39 Indians on board have been on anchorage in Chinese
waters as they were not allowed to unload their cargo.
The bulk cargo vessel MV Jag Anand is on anchorage near Jingtang port in Hebei
province of China since June 13 and with 23 Indian sailors on board. While
another vessel, MV Anastasia with 16 Indian crew members, is on anchorage near
Caofeidian port in China since September 20, External Affairs Ministry
Spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said at a media briefing.
Meanwhile, China has blamed the freight forwarder of Jag Anand ship for the
impasse, saying he is not letting the ship to leave the port. In media
briefing last week, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said, "we
stated repeatedly that China has clear stipulations on quarantine measures".
"As far as I understand, China allows the crew change while meeting certain
quarantine conditions. But this Jingtang port is not in the list for such crew
changes," he was quoted as saying by PTI.
He also cleared that there is no 'link' between the stranded Indian ship crew
on its Chinese ports and its strained relations with India and Australia.
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