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Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Paul Hutcheon

Trade union will support boycott if Russian-owned oil tanker lands in Orkney

A major trade union will support its members if they boycott the docking of a Russian-owned oil tanker in Orkney within days.

Unite said they would back the move in an act of international solidarity with Ukraine.

Owned by Sovcomflot (SCF Group), a shipping company majority-owned by the Russian state, the tanker is scheduled to dock at Flotta terminal on Tuesday.

However, the UK Government is under mounting to ban the ship from Orkney due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The UK has imposed further sanctions on the Putin regime and calls have been made to stop Sovcomflot.

In a letter to the Prime Minister, Orkney MP Alistair Carmichael said it was “imperative … that you should act without delay to ensure that Sovcomflot is sanctioned and denied access for their vessels to British ports”.

Unite, a trade union that represents workers at the terminal, has cranked up the pressure by promising to back a workers’ boycott.

Unite's Pat Rafferty (Alasdair MacLeod)

Pat Rafferty, Unite’s Scottish Secretary said: “Unite will support our members should they choose to boycott these ships in an act of International solidarity with the people of Ukraine.

“We call on the Scottish and Westminster governments to act now in enforcing sanctions that will ensure this situation does not arise again."

In practice, a boycott would likely involve the workforce offering no assistance to the tanker whatsoever.

Angus Robertson, the Scottish Government's cabinet secretary for external affairs, is also in favour of a ban.

He told BBC Scotland's Sunday Show: "The UK authorities have got a big decision to take, on whether we are going to allow Russian-owned or charted vessels to dock in UK ports.

"The Scottish government is in discussions with the UK authorities about this particular case but there will be others.

"This is a very fast moving situation and we're going to have to act decisively in my view."

A spokesman for Orkney Islands Council said: "As a council we are in an extremely difficult position.

"We recognise the strength of feeling around this - feelings that we share - but we are bound by our legal obligations to accept the vessel, until such a time as the UK government tells us otherwise."

A UK government spokesman said: "We are aware of concerns about Russian-connected ships potentially docking in the UK and we are working rapidly to explore a range of measures to restrict access for them.

"We are already discussing this issue with the Scottish government and the sanctions being considered are part of a wider package being worked up across the UK government."

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