
Audio By Carbonatix
Iran has seized a Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman.
Armed men wearing masks reportedly boarded the vessel St Nikolas, close to the Omani port of Sohar, and ordered it to sail to an Iranian port.
Iranian state media, quoting the navy, said the seizure was in retaliation for the ship and oil it had aboard being confiscated by the US last year.
The St Nikolas was in transit between the Iraqi port of Basra and its intended destination in Turkey.
UK Maritime Trade Operations said on Thursday it had received a report that four to five "unauthorised persons", reportedly wearing "military style black uniforms with black masks", had boarded the ship at 03:30 GMT.
They added that communications with the vessel had been lost and the authorities were investigating.
Iranian state media quoted the army as saying the vessel is American, although it is Greek-owned.
The company that manages it, Empire Navigation, said it was loaded with 145,000 tonnes of crude oil and was carrying 18 Filipinos and one Greek citizen as crew.
The St Nikolas was seized in April by the US under its previous name, the Suez Rajan, as part of sanctions enforcement against Iran.
Suez Rajan Limited, which formerly chartered the ship, later pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate sanctions by covertly selling and transporting oil abroad on behalf of Iran.
The US has called for the immediate release of the vessel and its crew, describing the seizure as the latest attempt by Iran to disrupt international commerce.
"We believe this kind of action will simply add uncertainty for commercial shipping and for regional and global economies," said US State Department spokesman Vedant Patel.
This latest act appears to be separate from attacks carried out by Houthi rebels from Yemen in the Red Sea on the opposite side of the Arabian peninsula.
Thursday's incident was in a different ocean from the Houthis' usual area of operations - where they have been attacking any ships they suspect of being linked to Israel in retaliation for the country's actions in Gaza.
The US and UK have hinted they could take military action against Yemen's Houthi rebels following the largest attack yet.
Carrier-based jets and warships shot down 21 drones and missiles launched by the Iran-backed group on Tuesday night.
The UN Security Council passed a resolution on Wednesday demanding an immediate end to the Houthi attacks.
Latest Stories
-
Guggisberg Fiagbenu enters race for Central Tongu NPP Chairmanship in Volta region
1 minute -
Today’s Front pages: Thursday, April 9, 2026
26 minutes -
“Black Stars have what it takes to win the World Cup” – Sports Minister Kofi Adams
52 minutes -
Bank of Ghana Governor to perform official tee-off at 3i Africa Invitational Tournament
1 hour -
Chamber of Bulk Oil Distributors urges caution amidst Special Prosecutor’s petroleum probe
1 hour -
NDC elections: Nat Tetteh eyes Eastern Regional Deputy Secretary position
2 hours -
Ablakwa highlights Ghana-France cooperation, praises Macron on reparatory justice
2 hours -
Protect people, not prices – Joe Jackson rejects fuel tax cuts and subsidies
2 hours -
Finance Ministry, BoG clarify false claims about Databank’s bond market specialist status
2 hours -
Lawyer petitions President to halt Terminal 2 refurbishment over value-for-money concerns
2 hours -
Sunyani Market traders urge government action amid surging ginger prices
2 hours -
Maphlix Farms to supply 3,000 tonnes to help bridge tomato deficit
2 hours -
Ho MP urges public access to officials’ asset declarations
2 hours -
Ecowas Bank for Investment and Development targets SMEs in Ghana with fresh funding for 2026
3 hours -
Two killed in Bosomtwe clash as residents demand increased security presence
3 hours