A British-registered gillnetter which featured on a Channel 4 television series on fishing has been detained by the European Fisheries Control Agency (EFCA) off the Irish coast.
The 23 metre Govenek of Ladram, which played a starring role in the series, The Catch, has been escorted into Castletownbere, Co Cork.
It was detained by the EFCA's fishery protection vessel Aegis 1 in the Celtic Sea for alleged fishing offences.
The EFCA, based in Vigo, Spain, said the vessel was inspected by two Irish fishery officers, who were on board the European agency’s charter vessel, Aegis 1, “in the framework of EFCA´s joint deployment plan for western waters”.
An EFCA spokeswoman said Ireland’s Sea Fisheries Protection Authority (SFPA) requested the Aegis 1 to escort the detained vessel to Castletownbere port.
The 1986-built British registered gillnetter is based in Newlyn, Cornwall, and is part of a fleet run by a family-owned fishing company.
It fishes for hake, monkfish and turbot, using static gill and trammel nets.
Its skipper Phil Mitchell and crew vividly portrayed the everyday lives of fishermen when the Channel 4 series was broadcast in 2015.
The EFCA organises joint fisheries control and inspection activities in EU waters through a specific control and inspection programme adopted by the European Commission in association with member states.
Authorised fisheries inspectors use EFCA chartered vessels, with activities always co-ordinated by an EFCA official on board, the EU agency says.
Ireland’s SFPA officers are currently engaged in industrial action over terms and conditions, which began with a 24 hour work stoppage earlier this week.