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Libyan coast guards tow away damaged Russian LNG tanker from its shores

The Government of National Unity in Tripoli (GNU), said that Libya's coast guard has started towing a damaged liquefied gas?tanker, which several Mediterranean countries had warned posed a?risk? for the environment after drifting without manned for weeks.

The Russian-flagged Arctic Metagaz has been drifting since early March when the Russian Transport Ministry claimed that it had been hit by Ukrainian drones.

It drifted near the coast of Zuwara, a western Libyan port.

Last week, Italy, France and Spain, as well as six other EU southern members, wrote to the European Commission warning that the tanker presented "an imminent and severe risk of a serious ecological disaster".

In a video, GNU Transport Minister Mohamed Al-Shahoubi stated that the National Oil Corporation of Libya has been given the task of unloading cargo from the Russian tanker. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is working with Russian and Maltese officials to ensure the safety of the maritime navigation on the Mediterranean Basin.

The Tripoli-based GNU’s Hakomitna platform posted a video on Tuesday showing a frigate pulling a tanker through the water with a thick cord.

Omar Mohamed Omar Al-Tuwair is the commander of the central sector for?the coastguard and ports security. He said in the video that the abandoned tanker had been towed from Zuwara shores.

Tuwair said: "We assure the people of Libya, in general, and in the western coastal regions, in particular, namely Zuwara and Sabratha that the relevant authorities will do everything possible to address the situation."

The authorities haven't yet revealed the final destination for the?tanker.

According to the Russian Transport ministry, the drones which hit the tanker were launched by Libya. The incident has not been commented upon by either Ukraine or Libya. (Reporting and Editing by William Maclean, Ahmed Elumami)

(source: Reuters)