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UAE: Iranian missiles hit oil tankers in Strait of Hormuz and one sailor was killed

Two Emirati oil tanks were hit by Iranian cruise missiles, killing one Indian crew member and injuring eight others, according to the United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defence. This is the latest incident in this strategic waterway.

ADNOC L&S, the shipping arm of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, confirmed that Mombasa B (VLCC) and Al Bahyah had been struck by a missile while transiting Hormuz. Both vessels sustained "significant damages". Last month, it was reported that the UAE state oil company ADNOC had been one of the most active participants of a U.S.-led military operation to transfer Gulf crude to international buyers via ship-to-ship transfers (STS), beyond the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. Central Command has not acknowledged STS transfers but said that on July 12, it had helped more than 800 vessels transport 400 million barrels through the Strait of Hormuz over the previous two months.

The UAE defence minister said that the tankers were attacked in the southern lane while in Omani territory waters. It said that the crew member who died was aboard "the Mombasa".

Four of the eight injured were severely wounded. The ministry reported that six of the injured were Indians and two Ukrainians.

Both tankers were damaged by the attacks after fires started on board. The ministry stated that the fires were under control.

The UAE has "the full right to respond" to the escalation.

The Islamic Revolutionary 'Guard Corps (IRGC), said on Tuesday, that two supertankers "offending" had been disabled in the Strait of Hormuz. They were hit after ignoring multiple warnings and turning off navigation systems.

The IRGC statement did not mention the vessel names or if it was referring the same tankers cited in the UAE Ministry of Defence.

The statement accused the U.S. of "inciting" vessels to take an illegal route and stated that cooperation with "aggressor enemies" would only lead to damage, delays for reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and a global energy shortage.

Separately the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said on Tuesday that a fuel tanker was hit by a projectile unknown while traveling 40 nautical miles northeast from Qalhat, Oman.

The UKMTO reported that the tanker's captain reported that the projectile had struck the engine room on the starboard side and that all crew members were safe.

It was not possible to verify immediately whether the UKMTO's report referred the same incident that had been reported by the UAE Ministry of Defence.

The recent incidents on the waterway follow weeks of increased tensions after the war began on February 28 when Israel and the U.S. launched attacks against Iran. On Monday, the U.S. Military carried out strikes for a third night in a row against Iran as President Donald Trump reinstated his blockade of Iranian ships and proposed charging a 20 percent fee to guard Strait of Hormuz.

Iran's top military command has said that the U.S. will not be allowed to interfere in the future of this waterway. Iran has attacked U.S. bases across the region. The conflict has destabilised and spread throughout the Gulf. The conflict has also called into question a U.S.-Iranian interim agreement signed last week to reopen and cease hostilities in the Strait of Hormuz.

Before the conflict started in February, approximately a fifth (or 15 million barrels) of all oil and gas transported to the global market was delivered through Hormuz. This fuel is worth more than $1.2 billion.

(source: Reuters)