Iran ships stranded in Brazil set to depart

Iran ships stranded in Brazil set to depart
The Iranian ships had been stuck in a Brazilian port since early June after a state oil giant refused to provide fuel for fear of breaching US sanctions on Iran.
3 min read
28 July, 2019
Iranian ship Bavand loaded with 48,000 tons of corn, was stuck in Paranagua port, Brazil[AFP/Getty]

Two Iranian ships stranded off the coast of Brazil for weeks were setting sail Saturday, officials said, after a court ordered state oil giant Petrobras to fuel up the vessels.

The bulk carriers had been stuck at Paranagua port in the southern state of Parana since early last month after Petrobras refused to provide fuel for fear of breaching US sanctions on Iran.

The ships dragged Brazil into a global standoff which has seen rising tensions and fears of a military clash involving Tehran and Washington, which imposed a raft of punitive measures on Iran and companies with ties to the Islamic Republic.

President Donald Trump has placed crippling sanctions on Iran since he pulled the United States last year out from a landmark multinational pact. The deal had lifted sanctions on Tehran in exchange for a freeze on its nuclear programme.

The port administrator said that the ship Termeh left around noon, headed to another Brazilian port where it would be loaded with corn. The Bavand, which already has its cargo, will leave for Iran Saturday night. The journey home takes approximately 30 days, the administrator added.

A spokesperson for Eleva Quimica, the Brazilian company which contracted the vessels, said refueling started in the early hours of Saturday, with the Termeh receiving 600 tons and Bavand 1,300 tons of fuel.

Petrobras, whose stock is listed in the US and in Sao Paulo, confirmed it was refueling the ships. 

The Supreme Court order came after Iran's top envoy to Brazil told Bloomberg that Tehran could suspend imports from Brazil if the issue was not resolved. 

The ships had reportedly brought urea, which is used to make fertilizer, to Brazil and were to transport corn back to Iran. 

Petrobras had said the Iranian vessels and the Iranian company that owns those ships - reportedly Sapid Shipping - were sanctioned by the United States.

Comment: For Iranians, the war has already begun

"If Petrobras were to supply these vessels, it would be subject to the risk of being included in the same list, which could cause serious damages to the company," it said in an earlier statement. 

Meanwhile, Iran's top diplomat Mohammad Javad Zarif hosted his Omani counterpart Yusuf bin Alawi in Tehran on Saturday.

The talks between Zarif and bin Alawi centred on the "latest regional and international issues".

Saturday's meeting has been seen as an effort at mediation over the British-flagged tanker held by Iran's Revolutionary Guards since 19 July. The ship is now in an Iranian port, along with its 23 crew members.

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