- Tennis power couple de Minaur and Boulter get engaged
- Supermaxi yachts eye record in gruelling Sydney-Hobart race
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupts, spewing columns of lava
- El Salvador Congress votes to end ban on metal mining
- Five things to know about Panama Canal, in Trump's sights
- NBA fines Minnesota guard Edwards $75,000 for outburst
- Haitians massacred for practicing voodoo were abducted, hacked to death: UN
- Inter beat Como to keep in touch with leaders Atalanta
- Mixed day for global stocks as market hopes for 'Santa Claus rally'
- Man Utd boss Amorim questions 'choices' of Rashford's entourage
- Trump's TikTok love raises stakes in battle over app's fate
- Is he serious? Trump stirs unease with Panama, Greenland ploys
- England captain Stokes to miss three months with torn hamstring
- Support grows for Blake Lively over smear campaign claim
- Canada records 50,000 opioid overdose deaths since 2016
- Jordanian, Qatari envoys hold talks with Syria's new leader
- France's second woman premier makes surprise frontline return
- France's Macron announces fourth government of the year
- Netanyahu tells Israel parliament 'some progress' on Gaza hostage deal
- Guatemalan authorities recover minors taken by sect members
- Germany's far-right AfD holds march after Christmas market attack
- European, US markets wobble awaiting Santa rally
- Serie A basement club Monza fire coach Nesta
- Mozambique top court confirms ruling party disputed win
- Biden commutes almost all federal death sentences
- Syrian medics say were coerced into false chemical attack testimony
- NASA solar probe to make its closest ever pass of Sun
- France's new government to be announced Monday evening: Elysee
- London toy 'shop' window where nothing is for sale
- Volkswagen boss hails cost-cutting deal but shares fall
- Accused killer of US insurance CEO pleads not guilty to 'terrorist' murder
- Global stock markets mostly higher
- Not for sale. Greenland shrugs off Trump's new push
- Sweden says China blocked prosecutors' probe of ship linked to cut cables
- Acid complicates search after deadly Brazil bridge collapse
- Norwegian Haugan dazzles in men's World Cup slalom win
- Arsenal's Saka out for 'many weeks' with hamstring injury
- Mali singer Traore child custody case postponed
- France mourns Mayotte victims amid uncertainy over government
- UK economy stagnant in third quarter in fresh setback
- Sweden says China denied request for prosecutors to probe ship linked to cut undersea cables
- African players in Europe: Salah leads Golden Boot race after brace
- Global stock markets edge higher as US inflation eases rate fears
- German far-right AfD to march in city hit by Christmas market attack
- Ireland centre Henshaw signs IRFU contract extension
- Bangladesh launches $5bn graft probe into Hasina's family
- US probes China chip industry on 'anticompetitive' concerns
- Biden commutes sentences for 37 of 40 federal death row inmates
- Clock ticks down on France government nomination
- 'Devastated' Australian tennis star Purcell provisionally suspended for doping
A fisherman's life on the high seas: harsh, risky and badly paid
"It's very tough, you make a lot of sacrifices and they don't pay you what they should," shrugs Jeronimo Martinez, a fisherman from Marin, home port of the shipwrecked Spanish trawler.
The tragedy -- Spain's worst fishing accident in nearly 40 years which claimed 21 lives and left only three survivors when their ship foundered in stormy waters off Newfoundland -- has thrown into sharp relief the risks and harsh working conditions faced by fishermen.
The death toll has sent shock waves across the northwestern region of Galicia where fishing is hugely important and which accounts for some 10 percent of all of the European Union's fresh fish landings, regional figures show.
Often these deep-sea fishermen will spend months at sea, far from their families.
"You're away for so long: you go out to sea when your child's just been born and when you come back, he's already doing his first communion," jokes Martinez as he takes a coffee at a bar popular with fishermen in Marin.
He used to spend six-month stints at sea fishing for cod off Newfoundland but is currently not working after having a hernia operation.
"For most sailors, the head of the family is the mother, who is the one who's at home. The fathers are all away, working," said the 51-year-old, who is missing part of a finger due to an accident while working on a trawler.
- Long hours, low pay -
"This is what happens when you're a fisherman: you get home and your child doesn't recognise you anymore," agrees Makhtar Diakhate, a retired trawler worker who has lived and worked in Marin since 2004.
Originally from Dakar in Senegal, his job on the high seas means he's only been able to get home to see his wife and kids once a year.
"I felt bad because sometimes stuff happened at home and I couldn't be there to help out," admits Diakhate, who is 64.
In Marin, like at other Galician ports, there are other African and Latin American migrants working the fishing trawlers, most of them from Ghana and Peru.
Onboard the Villa Pitanxo which sank off Canada on Tuesday, there were 16 Spaniards, five Peruvians and three Ghanaians.
"Working at sea is a bit dangerous but you have to do it," shrugs Ghanaian John Okutu, whose uncle Edemon Okutu is one of the missing crew members.
Migrants form an important part of the workforce in a trade that has little appeal for youngsters in Galicia.
Fran Sola, 49, who stopped working on trawlers more than 20 years ago and has since worked as a mechanic, said a crew member can earn around 1,500 euros ($1,700) a month.
"That's why young people don't do it, they prefer to be bricklayers because they earn the same and by 9:00 pm, they're at home with their families," he said.
- Hard work and isolation -
At sea "you have to work every day, 60 hours a week, there is no respect for the workers, you have to do what the boss says," said Sola, who almost lost a finger in one of the trailers heavy doors.
Although fishermen earned a good salary in the past, that is no longer the case.
"Twenty years ago, you would go out to sea and five years later you could buy a house, a car," he said.
Onboard the trawlers, living conditions are cramped with four to eight crew members sharing a room on some boats.
On most boats there is no television reception and Internet and mobile network coverage is patchy, meaning a stint on the high seas can be very lonely.
But although conditions on board are hard, those who have worked on these deep-sea fishing boats say shipwrecks are rare, thanks to the modernisation of trawler fleets.
"You are never completely safe because the sea is the sea," said Martinez.
He would rather not go back on the boats after recovering from his hernia operation.
"I have no desire to return, although I will if I don't have a choice. But I'd rather not go back out to sea because it is very hard," said this father of two young children, aged four and three.
M.A.Colin--AMWN