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Iran to release seized Swedish tanker — shipowner
By AFP - Sep 23,2019 - Last updated at Sep 23,2019
STOCKHOLM — A Swedish-owned oil tanker held by Iran in the Gulf is to be released, the shipowner said on Sunday, two months after it was seized amid heightened tensions in the region.
"We received information this morning indicating that the ship Stena Impero is going to be released in a few hours," Erik Hanell, the chief executive of the Stena Bulk company that owns the ship, told Swedish television SVT.
Contacted by AFP, Stena Bulk spokeswoman Lena Alvling confirmed Hanell's remarks but said, several hours later, that the ship had still not been freed.
"We have nothing new to report," she said.
The ship has been held offshore near Iran's southern port of Bandar Abbas.
Hanell had expressed caution about the tanker's release.
"We understand that the political decision has been taken to release the ship," he told SVT.
"We hope it will be able to leave in a few hours, but we don't want to take anything for granted. We want to make sure the ship sails out of Iranian territorial waters," he said.
Iran’s semi-official ISNA news agency said the tanker should be released “soon” but noted that there were still some legal issues pending, quoting the head of the local maritime organisation.
“Even though the legal procedure for the tanker’s departure from Iranian waters is going forward, the case regarding its legal violations is still open with Iran’s judicial authorities,” ISNA quoted Allahmorad Afifipour as saying.
“The final hearing process... is being followed and its results will be announced,” he added.
Iranian forces seized control of the British-flagged Stena Impero on July 19 as it was navigating through an international passage in the Strait of Hormuz at the entrance of the Gulf.
Tehran denied the seizure was a tit-for-tat move after British commandos seized an Iranian oil tanker on July 4 as it passed through Gibraltar’s waters, under suspicion it was breaking EU sanctions on oil deliveries to Syria.
Gibraltar released the ship — formerly called the Grace 1 but since renamed the Adrian Darya 1 — on August 18 after receiving written assurances from Iran that it would not head to countries under EU sanctions.
Tehran denied it had made any promises about the destination of the ship laden with 2.1 million barrels of oil, and is believed to have delivered its cargo to Syria.
The European Union maintains an embargo on Syria in response to President Bashar Assad’s bloody crackdown on dissents and rebels.
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