Washington: US Navy Seals boarded and took control of an oil tanker that had loaded crude at a rebel-held port in eastern Libya and escaped to sea, the Pentagon said Monday.
The freighter with six Pakistanis including Captain Mirza Noman Baig, Chief Officer Ghufran Margoob Ahmed, Second Officer Syed Mohammad Mehdi Shamsi, Third Officer Syed Asif Hassan, Naik Zaada and Mohammad Irshad on-board has been returned to Libya.
No one was hurt “when US forces, at the request of both the Libyan and Cypriot governments, boarded and took control of the commercial tanker Morning Glory, a stateless vessel seized earlier this month by three armed Libyans,” Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement.
The Morning Glory “is carrying a cargo of oil owned by the Libyan government’s National Oil Company. The ship and its cargo were illicitly obtained from the Libyan port of Al-Sidra,” the statement read.
The US Seals operated from the USS Roosevelt, a guided missile destroyer, which “provided helicopter support and served as a command and control and support platform”.
The Morning Glory, which last week slipped through a Libyan naval blockade of the eastern port of Al-Sidra — controlled by rebels seeking autonomy from the authorities in Tripoli — reportedly loaded some 234,000 barrels of crude.
Cypriot vessels “were deployed in monitoring the tanker?s course. The vessel stopped once more 18 nautical miles south of Limassol,” a city in southern Cyprus.
However the tanker did not ask for authorization to moor in a Cypriot port.
The Morning Glory originally was a North Korean-flagged ship, but Pyongyang on Wednesday denied any responsibility.
The ship was operated by an Egypt-based company that was allowed to temporarily use the North Korean flag under a contract with Pyongyang, North Korean state news agency KCNA said.
Pyongyang had “cancelled and deleted” the ship’s North Korean registry, as it violated its law “on the registry of ships and the contract that prohibited it from transporting contraband cargo”.
The loading of the Morning Glory and its escape to sea marked a major escalation in the struggle between Tripoli and the rebels, and triggered the ouster Tuesday of liberal-backed premier Ali Zeidan, who fled the country.
Zeidan, an independent, proved incapable of bringing to heel the former rebel militias who have carved out their own fiefdoms since the 2011 uprising that toppled the dictatorship of Moamer Kadhafi.
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