A P&O ferry has been released from two-week detention following re-inspection, British maritime officials said on Friday. The European Causeway, which was released on Friday, had been detained in Larne, Northern Ireland, since March 25 after it was deemed “unfit” to sail “due to failures on crew familiarisation, vessel documentation, and crew training.” It was the first of two P&O ferries detained after the UK’s Transport Secretary Grant Shapps ordered “very detailed inspections” of all P&O vessels following the company’s abrupt dismissal and replacement of almost 800 seafarers. P&O Ferries, which was bought by Dubai-based logistics giant DP World in 2019, sparked outrage when it fired 786 UK-based seafarers without any prior notice on March 17 and later replaced them with cheaper agency workers, citing £100 million ($132 million) year-on-year loss. A second vessel, the Pride of Kent, was detained on March 28. On Friday, a spokesperson for the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said The European Causeway …