A South Korean delegation left for Iran on January 7 to negotiate the early release of an oil tanker and its crew seized in strategic Gulf waters this week.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on January 4 said it had seized the South Korean-flagged Hankuk Chemi – which it said was carrying 7,200 tonnes of “oil chemical products” – for infringing maritime environmental laws.
The Guards said the arrested crew were from South Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam and Myanmar.
The South Korean delegation, led by the director-general of the foreign ministry’s Middle Eastern affairs department, boarded a plane early on January 7 and was set to arrive in Tehran via Doha, Qatar.
Before boarding the plane, chief delegate Koh Kyung-sok said: “I plan to meet my counterpart at the Iranian foreign ministry and will meet others through various routes if it will help efforts to resolve the issue of the ship’s seizure.”
Iran’s seizure of the tanker came after Tehran had urged Seoul to release billions of dollars of Iranian assets frozen in South Korea under US sanctions.
Iran was a key oil supplier to resource-poor South Korea until Washington’s rules blocked the purchases.
South Korea’s vice-foreign minister is due to travel to Tehran next week to discuss the frozen assets, a visit that Seoul said would go ahead despite the seizure.
According to Iran’s central bank governor Abdolnasser Hemmati, the country has “$7 billion of deposits in South Korea” that can neither “be transferred nor do we get any returns on, while they ask us for the costs” of holding the funds.
The incident was the first seizure of a major vessel by the Iranian navy in more than a year.
In July 2019, the Guards seized the British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero in the sensitive Strait of Hormuz for allegedly ramming a fishing boat and released it two months later.
It was at the time widely seen as a tit-for-tat move after authorities in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar detained an Iranian tanker and later released it over US objections.
Tehran denied the two cases were related.