Cruiseferry Pride of Hull which had operated P&O's North Sea route to Rotterdam, the Netherlands, departed the UK port's King George Dock under the cover of darkness as the latest chapter of the ongoing ferries scandal.
As HullLive reported, last week 800 P&O Ferries staff were sacked and with less than a day's notice as the company sought to remedy its yearly losses of over £100 million by bringing in foreign agency staff paid as little as £1.82 an hour. The ruthless job cuts included 82 crew members on the Pride of Hull, the ferry which operates between Hull and Rotterdam (see UK House of Commons story).
Protesters have been up in arms in defence of these workers, with two protests taking place at King George Dock in the last week. Protesters announced on Wednesday that they were planning a picket line for this Saturday at Hull's King George Dock, to prevent the Pride of Hull being loaded up with cargo so that it would not be able to leave.
Now, it has come to light that the Pride of Hull departed from King George Dock at approximately 7.48pm on Wednesday. It was not believed to be carrying paying passengers or cargo and is now crewed by its new agency staff.
More reports, HullLive on the ferry firm saga.
Afloat adds the Pride of Hull arrived the next day, Thursday to Rotterdam. Already docked in the Dutch port was a sister, Pride of Rotterdam having arrived on the 17th March, the day the mass sacking took place.
Two days later on the Irish Sea, the Norbank resumed service on the Liverpool-Dublin route as Afloat previously reported. The ropax is part of P&O Ferries Dutch-flag operations and whereby seafarers are not part of the dispute in the UK due to different employment law based in the Netherlands.
In addition such laws apply to the crew of Pride of Rotterdam which is also Dutch flagged and registered in Rotterdam.
Both these ferries (some of the biggest in the world) are part of the P&O fleet and form a legacy partnership between the ferry firm and the Dutch based Nedlloyd Group, with origins to North Sea Ferries that began in 1965.
Another UK-mainland Europe route but linking UK and Belgium involved Hull-Zeebrugge, however P&O Ferries closed the service in 2020 citing a sharp drop in demand due to the Covid19 pandemic.
As referred above the ropax Norbank and sister Norbay were built in the early 1990's for North Sea Ferries freight operations. Decades later on the Irish Sea they still retain their ship name prefix of 'Nor' reflecting their NSF era.

















































