'Malaviya Seven' owned by Mumbai's GOL Offshore Limited was held at the coast of Aberdeen in Scotland over "missing" wages for its staff members and a lack of "calculation and payment of wages" record. Its "seafarers employment agreement" was also invalid, making it a total of three offences that provided the grounds for detention.
'Malaviya Seven' is among seven foreign flagged ships under detention in UK ports after failing a Port State Control (PSC) inspection last month.
"When a ship is found to be not in compliance with applicable convention requirements, a deficiency may be raised. If any of their deficiencies are so serious they have to be rectified before departure, then the ship will be detained," the statement said.
The 'Malaviya Seven' is understood to have been chartered to carry out work for a number of companies, including BP, Dana Petroleum and Premier Oil.
The UK is part of a regional agreement known as the Paris Memorandum of Understanding on Port State Control under which information on all ships inspected is held centrally in an electronic database.