Iran’s Hormuz tolls would set a dangerous precedent, global shipping body says
The agency is working to re-establish the mechanisms that allowed ships to cross the strait before the war
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[LONDON] Allowing Iran to charge tolls for transit through the Strait of Hormuz would mark a dangerous and unacceptable precedent, according to the head of the world’s main shipping watchdog.
Iran charged vessels for passage through the waterway that handles for about a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas flows during the conflict.
Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz – which has included tolls – was one of Teheran’s conditions for the ceasefire, according to state media.
“This is a dangerous precedent,” Arsenio Dominguez, secretary-general of the International Maritime Organization said in a Bloomberg TV interview. “What we cannot have is this different or parallel approach where another country introduces a different mechanism that is not in line with international practice and we don’t even know if it guarantees the safety of the ships.”
On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump made conflicting claims about the ceasefire deal, including suggesting a joint US-Iran toll system for ships in Hormuz. For now, maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remains largely halted.
Dominguez said his agency is working to re-establish the mechanisms that allowed ships to cross Hormuz before the war. Prior to the conflict, vessels generally crossed the waterway using what was known as an international traffic separation scheme.
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A group of countries, including the UK, are working on plans to establish that there are no mines in Hormuz in order to confirm that it is safe to transit, Dominguez said. There has not been any confirmation that there are mines in the waterway so far, he added. BLOOMBERG
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