Iran tanker departs after Gibraltar rejects US demand
Iran tanker
departs after Gibraltar rejects US demand
The Iranian oil
tanker at the centre of a diplomatic dispute has departed from Gibraltar after
the British overseas territory rejected a US demand to seize the vessel.
According to
the monitoring website Marine Traffic, the supertanker — which had been
detained since July 4 off the coast of Gibraltar — lifted anchor Sunday evening
and started sailing south.
Authorities in
Gibraltar have not confirmed its departure.
Gibraltar
seized the Grace 1 on July 4 on suspicion it was transporting oil to Syria in
breach of European Union sanctions, triggering a sharp deterioration in
relations between Tehran and London. Iran has repeatedly denied any violations.
Its Supreme Court
ordered the tanker released last Thursday, with Iranian officials saying a new
crew had arrived to pilot the vessel — now renamed the Adrian Darya — and its
2.1 million barrels of oil.
But on Friday,
the US Justice Department filed a last-minute request to detain the ship,
alleging it was involved in supporting illicit shipments to Syria by Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, listed as a terrorist group by Washington.
Gibraltar's
government rejected that request, saying it could not seek a court order to
detain the supertanker because US sanctions against Iran were not applicable in
the European Union.
As of early
Monday, the vessel had turned east, with Marine Traffic reporting its
destination as Kalamata in Greece.
In its decision
ordering the release of the tanker, Gibraltar's government said it had received
written assurances from Iran that the ship would not be headed for countries
"subject to European Union sanctions".
Iran denied it
had made any promises about the ship's destination to secure the release.
"Iran
has given no assurances over the Grace 1 not going to Syria to secure its
release," a state media website quoted foreign ministry spokesman Abbas
Mousavi as saying.
The US State
Department has threatened to issue a visa ban on anyone working on the ship.
The July 4
seizure by Gibraltar authorities and by British Royal Marines came amid surging
tensions in the Gulf after several alleged Iranian attacks on smaller tankers.
The US — citing
Tehran's threat to American allies — expanded its military presence in the
region with a new aircraft carrier task force, missile batteries and strategic
bombers.
Iran termed the
move an "illegal interception" staged by the United States, while
Washington cheered it as "excellent news".
Iran
subsequently detained the British-flagged tanker Stena Impero in what was seen
as a tit-for-tat move.
Ties between
Tehran and Washington have frayed since President Donald Trump withdrew last
year from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal between major powers and Iran,
reimposing crippling unilateral sanctions.
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