P&O ferry detained over crew training
concerns, says coastguard agency
Transport secretary Grant Shapps says ship was
detained in Northern Ireland for being ‘unfit to sail’
Nadeem
Badshah
Fri 25 Mar
2022 22.20 GMT
A P&O
ferry has been detained in Northern Ireland “due to failures on crew
familiarisation, vessel documentation and crew training”, according to the
Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA).
The agency
said the ship, the European Causeway, was impounded at the port of Larne.
Transport
secretary Grant Shapps said that the ferry was detained for being “unfit to
sail”.
Shapps
wrote on Twitter: “Following my instruction to inspect all P&O vessels
prior to entering back into service, the MCA has detained a ship for being
unfit to sail. I will not compromise the safety of these vessels and P&O
will not be able to rush inexperienced crew through training.”
The MCA
said: “The vessel will remain under detention until all these issues are
resolved by P&O Ferries. Only then will it be reinspected.”
Detention
of ships is based on concerns over their safety and to prevent them going to
sea.
Karl
Turner, Labour MP for Hull East, wrote on Twitter: “It gets worse for P&O
Ferries, news just in that the European Causeway on the Cairnryan-Larne route
has failed her Port State Inspection.
“The vessel
is arrested and detained by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency in Larne.”
Earlier
this week, an inspection was carried out by the MCA on a P&O ferry docked
in Hull to ensure agency staff brought in to replace 800 sacked workers can
operate it safely.
Downing
Street has called for the chief executive of P&O Ferries to resign over the
sacking of the staff and pledged to push through legislation next week to force
the company to reverse the move and pay its crew the minimum wage.
Peter
Hebblethwaite admitted to MPs on Thursday that his company broke the law by
sacking the 800 workers without consultation.
The
transport union RMT said it welcomed the detention of the European Causeway and
it demanded the government “seize the entire fleet” of P&O vessels.
General
secretary Mick Lynch said: “The seizing of the European Causeway by the MCA
tonight shows that the gangster capitalist outfit P&O are not fit and
proper to run a safe service after the jobs massacre.
“This mob
should be barred, their ships impounded and the sacked crews reinstated to get
these crucial ferry routes back running safely.”
Alliance
MLA for East Antrim Stewart Dickson welcomed the impounding of the ferry as a
safety measure.
“It’s not
like the crew of an airplane getting off one easyJet and getting on to the next
one where the controls are the exactly the same, and everything is in the same
place,” he told PA.
“No two
ships are the same, and you cannot just fly a crew in and expect them to be able
to sail a ship. Every control will be in a different place, but particularly
all those health and safety drills that have to be gone through, everything
from lifeboat stations to how each item of equipment operates. It seemed to me
it was going to be very difficult for staff to be able to take on that role in
such a short period of time.
“I am
absolutely delighted they have [impounded the ship]. This isn’t vengeance
against P&O, it’s about passenger safety and the safety of the crew as
well.”

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