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Hormuz evacuation suspended after attack in Gulf of Oman – UN

The evacuation of around 11,000 mariners stranded by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz was suspended Thursday after an attack on a vessel in the Gulf of Oman, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) said.

The UN’s maritime agency said earlier this week it would begin evacuating 600 ships and their crews that were trapped by the US-Iran war, after Washington and Tehran agreed a preliminary deal to end the conflict.

But a cargo ship was damaged by an unknown projectile off the Omani coast in the strategic strait on Thursday, prompting the IMO to halt the operation.

“I have decided to temporarily pause (the evacuation plan’s) implementation in order to reconfirm that the necessary safety guarantees continue to be in place for the ships on our evacuation list and all those in the region,” IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez said in a statement.

The vessel that was hit on Thursday was not travelling under the IMO’s evacuation framework, which began on Tuesday evening, Dominguez said.

The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) security agency said the ship’s captain had reported damage to the bridge but no casualties.

Seventy confirmed crossings of the Strait of Hormuz were recorded on Wednesday, according to an X post by analytics firm Kpler, but traffic is at around half of its pre-war level.

Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority warned on X that ships using routes outside the designated framework “will not be covered by safe passage guarantees”.

Earlier on Thursday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warned against any crossings of the Strait of Hormuz without authorisation, saying vessels not complying “will be dealt with”.

The post Hormuz evacuation suspended after attack in Gulf of Oman – UN appeared first on Vanguard News.

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