Maritime and Logistics News
  • Maritime & Ocean News
    • Container Shipping News
    • Dry Bulk Shipping News
    • Breakbulk Shipping News
    • Chemical Shipping News
    • Crude Oil Shipping News
    • Cruise Shipping News
    • Fishing News
    • Freight Forwarders News
    • LNG & LPG Shipping News
    • Multimodal Transport News
    • Railway News
    • Straits News
    • Trucking News
  • Global Ports News
    • Port Accidents News
    • Port Congestion News
    • Port Infrastructure News
    • Port Strike News
    • Schedules News
  • Air Cargo News
    • Air Cargo Carriers News
    • Air Freight Forwarder News
    • Airports News
  • Logistics News
    • Supply Chain News
    • Warehousing News
    • Cold Storage News
    • Logistics Parks News
  • Vessels News
    • Bunkering News
    • Incidents News
    • Offshore News
    • Pilotage News
    • Piracy News
    • Services News
    • Ship Breaking News
    • Shipbuilding News
  • Tech. & Sustainability News
    • Green Logistics News
    • Responsibility Projects News
    • Useful Maritime Associations News
  • Languages
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Advertisement
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Logistics News

The hidden trauma of piracy

January 20, 2026
in Logistics News, Logistics Parks News
The hidden trauma of piracy
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Piracy leaves scars you cannot see and the maritime industry still treats it as a footnote, argues Alexander Dimitrevich, a clinical psychiatrist at Mental Health Support Solutions, in this exclusive for Splash.
I have spent more than 15 years meeting seafarers in the first hours after they step out of pirate captivity, and in those moments you see the truth of piracy far more clearly than in any security report or industry briefing. What becomes immediately obvious is that piracy is not simply an operational disruption or a matter of physical security. It is a profound psychological injury that embeds itself into the lives of those who survive it.
We now have rigorous research confirming what many of us working directly with survivors have known for years. A major comparative study published in Marine Policy showed that former hostages experience markedly higher levels of trauma, psychological distress, depression and long-term health problems compared with those who have never been captured. Many ultimately leave the profession altogether because the experience shadows every future contract.
During the height of the Somali piracy crisis I worked with crews who had endured months and sometimes years of captivity, during which they were subjected to beatings, mock executions and relentless psychological manipulation designed to fracture trust within their own group. Pirates understood that breaking cohesion made people easier to control, and they used this knowledge deliberately. In West Africa the tone can appear more restrained on the surface, yet seafarers held in river-delta camps remain under constant threat and often witness sudden bursts of violence between armed factions. The conditions might differ, but the psychological imprint left on survivors is strikingly similar. They all return home carrying a burden that is invisible to most and rarely acknowledged by many employers.
These experiences do not neatly end when the seafarer arrives at an airport or when the vessel is handed back to its owner. Some survivors are plagued by intrusive memories and hypervigilance, while others remain silent and refuse to discuss what happened, only later pulling away from future contracts or quietly leaving the sector. I have also seen the opposite reaction among crew who have passed repeatedly through high-risk waters without incident and gradually persuade themselves that the danger is theoretical. That kind of denial leads to corners being cut, procedures ignored and a general complacency that undermines every other safety measure in place. Both reactions place seafarers and ships at further risk.
One of the most persistent and damaging issues is the lack of psychological preparation before joining a vessel. Too many seafarers board ships without any clear understanding of how their company will respond if they are taken hostage, without knowing how communication with their families will be handled and without any framework for coping with the reality of captivity should it occur.
Some operators, particularly smaller ones, prefer to assume that piracy will not touch their vessels, often because preparation requires money, time and uncomfortable conversations. Even where contractual rights exist that allow seafarers to refuse high-risk voyages, the practical realities of shipping mean these rights are difficult to exercise, and many seafarers know it. The discrepancy between what is written on paper and what happens in practice creates a deep sense of insecurity that can be just as corrosive as the incident itself.
Industry leaders often reassure themselves by citing the low statistical probability of being captured. At certain points the risk hovered around half a percent, and while this sounds reassuring in a boardroom, it is meaningless to the person who becomes that half percent. Their life changes in an instant, and the consequences for their health, their family and their career are far-reaching.
The maritime sector must finally accept that piracy is, at its core, a human problem. The people at risk are not abstractions. They are the very workforce that keeps global trade functioning, and their psychological resilience is not a luxury or an optional extra. It must become standard practice for companies to provide serious pre-joining preparation, clear and honest communication about protocols, structured decompression time after release and long-term access to qualified mental health professionals. Anything less is a failure of duty and a failure of leadership.
I have sat with too many survivors, listened to too many stories and watched too many careers quietly dissolve to accept the industry’s current level of complacency. Piracy is not simply an attack on a ship or its cargo. It is an attack on the minds of the people who make this industry possible. Until maritime leaders recognise this fact and act with the seriousness it demands, we will continue to fail the very seafarers we rely on.
Tags: AndManyThatTheWith

Related Posts

Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025
Container Shipping News

Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025

January 20, 2026
Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping
Logistics News

Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping

January 20, 2026
PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split
Logistics News

PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split

January 20, 2026
Laskaridis tipped to join suezmax order rush in South Korea
Logistics News

Laskaridis tipped to join suezmax order rush in South Korea

January 20, 2026
HEBO wins contract to remove Wintershall platforms in North Sea
Logistics News

HEBO wins contract to remove Wintershall platforms in North Sea

January 20, 2026
EnBW sells stake in 1.5GW UK offshore wind project to JERA Nex BP
Logistics News

EnBW sells stake in 1.5GW UK offshore wind project to JERA Nex BP

January 20, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

November 19, 2024
FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

August 21, 2025
Vintage VLCC prices firm up

Vintage VLCC prices firm up

February 25, 2025
At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

November 18, 2024
PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse,

PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse

0
Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

0
Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

0
Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

0
Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025

Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025

January 20, 2026

Why US military installation affects Cosco’s investment in Peru?

January 20, 2026
Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping

Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping

January 20, 2026
PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split

PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split

January 20, 2026

Recent News

Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025

Panama container port traffic grows 3.6% in 2025

January 20, 2026

Why US military installation affects Cosco’s investment in Peru?

January 20, 2026
Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping

Greenland control and tariffs threaten to destabilise transatlantic shipping

January 20, 2026
PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split

PIL lines up eight LNG neo-panamaxes in China–Korea split

January 20, 2026

Stay ahead in the dynamic world of maritime and logistics with our comprehensive news coverage. Explore the latest industry trends, breaking news, and insightful analyses. Your gateway to informed decision-making in shipping, trade, and logistics awaits.

Follow Us

Our Partners

shipstrack.com
E-tracking
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.

No Result
View All Result

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.