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STOWAWAY PROBLEM

GROWING SEVERITY. CONFINEMENT AT SEA. Sydney, June 23. Stowaways ave presenting- a growing problem to the companies whose liners voyage between Sydney and New Zealand. In the last six weeks twenty stowaways have crossed the Tasman. Most of them have paid the penalty in gaol sentences ranging from a month to ten days.

The hope that another country will offer better chances of employment is the incentive that impels the majority of stowaways. Sometimes an Australian, having tried his luck in

the Dominion and failed, or a New Zealander who cannot earn a living in Sydney, stows away because he wants to return home and has no passage money.

In the first eighteen months of her service the Union liner Awatea rarely had a stowaway, and officers used to laugh and say the ship was too fast for them. But a few cases developed into an epidemic until in the last month, the Awatea has carried many unauthorised passengers. On May 12, three New Zealand youths were found hiding on board after the liner sailed from Sydney. They were able to meditate in confinement on the perils of a Tasman crossing.

It is merely a legend of the sea—as far as the Tasman is concerned, at any rate —that the stowaway can be put to work, and work out his

passage. The liners have union crews and free labour is not appreciated. The shipping companies are not compensated by the efforts of the stowaway, however energetic he may be.

In the last few weeks, the Matson liners Mariposa and Monterey have had three stowaways. One was an American who boarded the Mariposa in Melbourne, escaped detection in Sydney and was discovered when half-way to Auckland. He could not be landed in Auckland and had to be carried on to the United States.

America Can Be Heard.

The Americans are the most severe on stowaways. American merchant marine regulations allow ship masters to feed "free travellers" for a week on bread and water, giving

them one square meal at the end of each week. Thus, a stowaway legally can be forced to live on bread and water throughout a voyage to or from New Zealand. Right in the forecastles of the Mariposa and Monterey are the "brigs." These are tiny steel grilled cabins, where every pitch of the liners is felt, with little or no room for exercise.

On recent voyages the Huddart Parker liner Wanganella has carried eight stowaways from New Zealand and four or five from Australia to New Zealand. Three were aboard from New Zealand on one voyage. The Wanganella has a dummy funnel, and this is used with a couple of bunks for housing them. It makes an uncomfortable cabin.

Shipping men point out that it is difficult to detect every prospective

stowaway before a liner leaves the wharf, but additional searches are being made. Stowaways when caught are sent straight to the police courts, both in Australia and N.Z., as soon as they are released by the immigration authorities. There are times in Sydney when a New Zealander is not allowed to land and has to be returned. He is then usually charged in New Zealand. Once a stowaway had a chance if he had a genuine hard-luck story, but so many impostors have told heartrending tales that officials are becoming more difficult to convince.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19390710.2.4

Bibliographic details

King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4808, 10 July 1939, Page 2

Word Count
561

STOWAWAY PROBLEM King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4808, 10 July 1939, Page 2

STOWAWAY PROBLEM King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4808, 10 July 1939, Page 2