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Iran seizes oil tanker in Gulf; 2 missing in collision

China Daily | Updated: 2023-04-29 08:32

Oil tanker Advantage Sweet sails through the Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul, Turkiye, on Feb 11. [Photo/Agencies]

DUBAI — Iran seized a US-bound oil tanker off Oman on Thursday, saying it had crashed into an Iranian vessel leaving two crew members missing, in the latest disruptive incident in the crucial but troubled waterway.

The United States Navy demanded the immediate release of the Marshall Islands-flagged tanker, saying it was transiting international waters in the Gulf of Oman and slamming Iran's "continued harassment of vessels".

It is one of a spate of incidents since 2018, when then US president Donald Trump pulled his country out of a multinational nuclear agreement that froze Iran's nuclear program and reimposed crippling sanctions on Iran, sending tensions soaring. Marathon talks to restart the accord have stalled.

"The Iranian government should immediately release the oil tanker," the Bahrain-based US Fifth Fleet said in a statement.

The latest flare-up came only days after Teheran's Western rivals toughened sanctions on Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The Fifth Fleet initially blamed the Revolutionary Guards, but then said the capture was carried out by Iran's navy.

It identified the vessel as the oil tanker Advantage Sweet and said it issued a distress call during the seizure.

Iran's navy said the "violator" ship was captured after a collision with an Iranian ship that left two missing and several injured.

"Following the collision of an unknown ship with an Iranian vessel in the waters of the Persian Gulf, two of the vessel's crew went missing and several others were injured," the Iranian navy said in a statement.

"The navy of the army, by court order, seized the violator ship, that was fleeing with the flag of the Marshall Islands, and directed it to the coastal waters of the Islamic Republic of Iran."

Sensitive waters

Iran and the US have traded barbs over incidents in the sensitive waters of the Gulf that are a chokepoint for at least a third of the world's seaborne oil.

Thursday's seizure is just the latest incident in the Strait of Hormuz, where ships have been mysteriously attacked, drones downed and oil tankers seized since 2018.

The MarineTraffic tracking website last showed Advantage Sweet, which is owned by Advantage Tankers, off the coast of Oman. The crude oil vessel had departed from Kuwait and was en route to Houston, it said.

On Monday, the US, the United Kingdom and the European Union toughened sanctions against the Revolutionary Guards, citing alleged human rights violations.

Iran later announced countermeasures, including financial sanctions and entry bans, targeting EU and UK individuals and entities for "imposing and exacerbating cruel sanctions".

In July 2019, the Revolutionary Guards seized the British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero in the same waterway for allegedly ramming a fishing boat, and released it two months later.

In 2021, Iran released an oil tanker from the Republic of Korea it had held for months amid a dispute over billions of dollars seized by Seoul. Last May, Iran also seized two Greek oil tankers.

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