Tanker carrying Russian oil hit by drone in Black Sea near Turkey

(Reuters)

ISTANBUL, March 26 – A marine drone struck a crude oil ‌tanker that had departed Russia, causing an explosion in the Black Sea near Istanbul’s Bosphorus strait on Thursday, Turkey’s transportation minister said.

The incident, one of several in recent months involving Western-sanctioned vessels heading to or from Russian ports, occurred in the early hours, minister Abdulkadir ​Uraloglu told broadcaster Kanal 24.

All 27 crew were safe, he said, adding that the coastguard had been ​dispatched to the vessel, the Altura, which was about 18 nautical miles (33 km) from ⁠the Bosphorus, a key commodities-shipping channel linking the Black Sea with the Marmara and the Mediterranean.

The attack, just outside ​Turkish territorial waters, likely aimed to disable the engine room in the Sierra Leone-flagged vessel that was carrying Russian ​oil, Uraloglu said.

Ship-tracking and Refinitiv AIS data showed the vessel had left Russia’s port of Novorossiysk with about 1 million barrels of crude oil and appeared almost fully laden.

The ship is sanctioned by the European Union and Britain. The Black Sea is shared by ​Russia and Ukraine, which have been at war for more than four years, as well as other states.

Turkey’s ​defence ministry said on Thursday it was closely monitoring risks posed in the Black Sea by drones, given their extensive use in ‌the ⁠Russia-Ukraine war. Risks included drones losing control or mobility, drifting towards the Turkish coast, it said.

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