Indian sailors risk work at sea, as Iran war grinds on
Indian sailors are increasingly finding themselves caught in the crossfire of the Iran war, with thousands of seafarers stranded in conflict-hit waters. Families back home are grieving the loss of loved ones while desperately seeking government he...

For hundreds of thousands of Indians, merchant shipping jobs are a lucrative proposition despite the inherent risks.
The attack on Pooniya's ship killed two fellow Indians -- the country's sailors are among the highest merchant maritime casualties from the Middle East war.
Also Read: 20,000 Indian seafarers caught in Gulf tensions
Dalip Singh and Ashish Kumar Singh were the first Indians killed in the conflict, after their oil tanker was hit on March 1 by projectiles off Oman's Khasab port.
"There was a huge noise and the whole ship shook," Pooniya recalled.
"The whole ship was up in flames."
Pooniya, 26, had travelled together with Dalip to Dubai, where they boarded the tanker.
"Everyone jumped into the sea wearing life jackets," Pooniya told AFP, now back home in India. "I screamed for Dalip, but he was gone in the fire."
Eleven merchant sailors have been killed in the conflict, according to the International Maritime Organization (IMO). At least four were Indian.
The United States has imposed its own naval blockade on Iranian ports.
Flurry of missiles
Ships have been hit by projectiles and fired on in dozens of incidents, according to the British maritime security monitor UKMTO.
An Indian-flagged ship carrying livestock from Somalia was reported hit and sunk off Oman on May 13 -- all 14 crew were rescued.
Thousands of Indians are among the estimated 20,000 seafarers stranded by the Strait of Hormuz blockade.
But Manoj Yadav, general secretary of the Forward Seamen's Union of India, said people just want to earn a living.
"We have a massive unemployment problem," he said. "Being on a ship is a convenient way out for many, as it is a relatively well-paying job for the qualification it demands."
Dalip, 25, a high-school graduate from the hot deserts of Rajasthan, was an engineering support member, on his second voyage.
"Year after year, he failed to get a government job," his younger brother Manoj Singh, 24, told AFP.
Desperate for a better life for his family, Dalip borrowed money and enrolled himself in a maritime training programme, and secured a job on a merchant ship.
Dalip's salary -- $450 dollars a month -- was roughly three times the average income of a rural household.
His brother Manoj Singh, a stone cutter, had been hoping to follow him to sea -- a plan he has since abandoned.
"My father died of shock after hearing that my brother was dead," he said. "I cannot afford to leave home now."
The family of the ship's captain, Ashish Kumar Singh, 38, from the eastern state of Bihar, is mourning his death.
"I just want the government to help me get my husband's remains back," said his wife, Anshu Kumari. "How do I otherwise get closure?"
Raju Ram, 33, also from Rajasthan, has been on a tanker in the port of Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates since April, waiting to cross the Strait of Hormuz.
He has witnessed a "flurry of missiles" near his vessel.
"It is risky of course," he told AFP, by telephone from the vessel. "But at least our families respect us for the money we send back home."
Pooniya, meanwhile, says he has few other options.
"The jobs that people like us get in India, you are always stuck in a cycle of debt," he said. "In this line of work, at least the money is good."
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.