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Iran Tanker Too Big to Dock at Greek Port

An Iranian tanker that has sparked a diplomatic row pitting Tehran against Washington and London is too big to dock in Greece, the country's junior foreign minister said Wednesday.

ATHENS, Greece (AFP) - An Iranian tanker that has sparked a diplomatic row pitting Tehran against Washington and London is too big to dock in Greece, the country's junior foreign minister said Wednesday.

"This is a very large crude carrier, it is over 130,000 tonnes... It cannot access any Greek dock," junior foreign minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis told Ant1 TV.

Varvitsiotis said the Greek government had "faced pressure" from U.S. authorities over the vessel but insisted that Athens "has sent a clear message that we would not wish to facilitate the transport of this oil to Syria under any circumstances."

The British Royal Marines seized the ship on July 4 off British territory Gibraltar on suspicion it was transporting oil to Syria in breach of European Union sanctions, triggering a sharp deterioration in relations between Tehran and London.

Iran has repeatedly denied any violations.

The incident has come at a difficult time for Greece's new conservative government which was elected just over a month ago.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' office on Wednesday said the PM is expected to visit Washington “soon," and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is expected to visit Greece in the autumn, Varvitsiotis said.

Greece must also tread carefully as its influential shipping sector does major business in the Persian Gulf.

Varvitsiotis said Athens was not in contact with Tehran over the tanker, which was originally called Grace 1 but has been renamed the Adrian Darya, and had received no request from Iran.

The website Marine Traffic, which earlier this week gave the ship's reported destination as the Greek port of Kalamata, had placed the supertanker carrying 2.1 million barrels of oil some 60 miles northwest of the Algerian port of Oran.

The maritime tracker says the tanker is expected to arrive in Kalamata on Monday, but Varvitsiotis suggested it may not dock in Greek waters at all.

"It has named Kalamata as its port of destination but this doesn't mean anything," adding: "It could drop anchor somewhere" else.

"It could unload the oil at any non-EU refinery. It could head south" to North Africa, he added.

Gibraltar's Supreme Court ordered the tanker released last Thursday, with Iranian officials saying a new crew had arrived to pilot the vessel.

© Agence France-Presse

Categories / International, Politics

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