British-flagged tanker Stena Impero reaches international waters

The British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero which
had been detained by Iran for over two months reached international waters on
Friday, according to its Swedish owner.
The ship began moving from the Iranian port of
Bandar Abbas toward international waters at 9 a.m. Iran time on Friday, the
Ports and Maritime Organization of Iran said.
The judicial file on the vessel is still open and
the process of looking into “violations” committed by the ship continues, the
agency said in a statement.
The Stena Impero was detained by Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards in the Strait of Hormuz waterway for alleged marine
violations two weeks after Britain seized an Iranian tanker off the territory
of Gibraltar. That vessel was released in August.
The Stena has set a new destination for Port Rashid
in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, about 250 km away, the tracking data
showed. At normal tanker speed, it would reach within half a day.
Iran’s foreign ministry had said on Wednesday that a
lifting of the detention order had been finalized, but that an investigation
into the vessel was ongoing.
The ship’s owner, Stena Bulk of Sweden, later said
it was not in negotiations with Iran and was not aware of any formal charges
against the crew or the company.
Iran had earlier freed seven of the ship’s 23 crew
members.
Iran’s seizure of the Stena Impero on July 19 had
ratcheted up tensions in the region following attacks in May and June on other
merchant vessels in Gulf waters which Washington blamed on Tehran. Iran has denied
responsibility.
Relations between the United States and Iran have
become more strained since Washington withdrew last year from a global pact to
rein in Tehran’s nuclear programme and imposed sanctions on the country aimed
at shutting down Iranian oil exports.