The Singapore-flagged Alpine Eternity was helped by the UAE Coast Guard to Jebel Ali port in Dubai, pictured here. Pawan Singh/The National
The Singapore-flagged Alpine Eternity was helped by the UAE Coast Guard to Jebel Ali port in Dubai, pictured here. Pawan Singh/The National

Iranian boats fire warning shots at Singapore-flagged ship



WASHINGTON // Iran appeared to be trying to intercept a Singapore-flagged commercial ship on Thursday in order to settle a legal dispute, a US official said.

The Alpine Eternity – a 29,130 gross tonnes oil products tanker – reportedly hit an Iranian-owned oil platform on March 22.

“Iran claims that the vessel is liable for damages to the oil platform,” the US official said.

An official at the UAE’s Coast Guard said that the cargo ship came under fire from four Iranian boats on international Gulf waters.

The source said that the ship sent a distress call to the UAE Coast Guard forces who responded by helping it to reach the Jebel Ali port, according to the official Wam agency.

The Alpine Eternity has safely reached the UAE port of Jebel Ali, its manager confirmed.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, were unaware of any US navy involvement.

A spokesman for the vessel’s Norwegian manager Transpetrol said the incident happened at 12pm UAE time on Thursday on its way to the UAE port of Fujairah.

“The nature of the attack is still unclear,” the spokesman said. “She reached UAE waters and she is in the port of Jebel Ali now. The vessel is safe and there are no injuries to crew.”

The spokesman said the incident had been reported to Singaporean authorities.

A second US official said there were about five Iranian ships and described the shots as “small arms fire”.

“Once the ship went into UAE territorial waters, the Iranian ships broke off,” the official said, also speaking on condition of anonymity.

Iran, currently in a standoff with a Saudi-led coalition over security inspections of one of its own cargo ships, last month intercepted a Marshall Islands-flagged vessel in the Strait of Hormuz.

It forced that ship into Iranian waters by firing shots across its bow.

Saudi-led forces have imposed inspections on ships entering war-torn Yemen in an attempt to prevent weapons being smuggled to the Iran-allied rebel Houthi group that controls much of the country.

Iran complained to the UN Security Council of the Saudi-led coalition’s forces hindering its attempts to send aid to Yemen as a standoff loomed on Wednesday over an Iranian cargo ship bound for the Arabian Peninsula.

Millions of barrels of oil pass through the Bab Al Mandeb and Strait of Hormuz every day to Europe, the United States and Asia, waterways which pass along the coasts of Yemen and Iran respectively.

* Reuters and Wam

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