Close
Fake seafarer documentation remains a concern
MRA Online

Fake seafarer documentation remains a concern

A maritime fraud crisis

The International Maritime Organisation’s Sub-Committee on Human Element, Training and Watchkeeping (HTW) issued a report at the beginning of the month outlining more than 100 documented cases of fraudulent seafarer documentation reported over from 2024 to the end of January this year.

The HTW document catalogues fraudulent certificate detections across multiple flag states, painting a troubling picture of systematic credential forgery affecting the global maritime workforce.

The overwhelming majority of fraudulent certificates were detected through email verification with issuing authorities which appears to be the primary defence against credential fraud.

Analysis of which countries' credentials were most frequently forged reveals concerning patterns. The top five countries that the fake documents claimed to be issued by represented almost 75% of all the cases.

 

COUNTRY # %

Honduras

33 26,8
Cook Islands 21 17
Panama 19 15,5
Myanmar 11 8,9
Croatia 5 4,1
Ireland 4 3,3
Sri Lanka 4 3,3
Ukraine 4 3,3
Russia 3 2,5
Georgia 2 1,6
Tanzania 2 1,6
Australia 1 0,8
Egypt 1 0,8
Ethiopia 1 0,8
Ghana 1 0,8
Greece 1 0,8
Guyana 1 0,8
India 1 0,8
Indonesia 1 0,8
Jamaica 1 0,8
Mexico 1 0,8
Philippines 1 0,8
Romania 1 0,8
Spain 1 0,8
Tonga 1 0,8

Almost 60% of the reported cases related to Certificates of Competency while a further 30% related to Certificates of Proficiency. Fraudulent Seamans Books represented the remaining 10% of cases. Multiple cases involved fake certificates for oil, chemical, and liquefied gas tanker operations – positions requiring specialised training for risky operations.

The document submitted by the HTW Sub-committee highlights that the list may not represent the full extent of fraudulent activity and encourages more robust reporting from Member States.

Print
381
OUT NOW
Maritime Tender Intelligence

image

The Q1 2026 Maritime Tender Intelligence Report is the first in a new series of quarterly deep-dives. It includes detailed sections highlighting trends and opportunities within a number of maritime sectors across Africa.

GRAB YOUR COPY

RSS Upcoming Events

3 Jun 2026 FAIRSHIP SA MARINE BURSARY GOLF DAY 6/3/2026

The SATS General Botha Old Boys Association Bursary Fund is once again hosting a Durban Golf Day one which takes place on 3 June 2026.

 

10 Jun 2026 INTEGRATING FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES IN MENA MARITIME TRANSPORT 6/10/2026 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM

The webinar will address the latest trends in digitalization, automation, and green innovations, while exploring the regulatory and policy implications that accompany this accelerated change.

20 Jul 2026 SEAFLOOR LANDFORMS, PROCESSES AND EVOLUTION 7/20/2026 - 12/24/2026

The 3rd International Conference on Seafloor Landforms, Processes and Evolution will be organised by the University of KwaZulu-Natal and the Submarine Geomorphology working group of the International Association of Geomorphologists (IAG), and will take place on the 20th to 24th July 2026 in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

4 Aug 2026 16th AQUACULTURE ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN AFRICA'S CONFERENCE 8/4/2026 - 8/6/2026

The Aquaculture Association of Southern Africa (AASA) invites researchers, students, industry stakeholders, government partners and all interested parties to its upcoming biennial conference, themed “Resilience through Collaboration,”

123

CONTACT US

EMAIL:  editor@maritimesa.co.za
PHONE: +27 21 914 1157

Terms Of UsePrivacy StatementCopyright 2026 | More Maximum Media - publishers of Maritime Review Africa
Back To Top