26/06/23
Hormuz traffic management changed forever: Iran
Hormuz traffic management changed forever: Iran
Dubai, 23 June (Argus) — Administration of the strait of Hormuz will never
return to how it was prior to the US-Iran war and will instead be managed by
Tehran, according to the country's parliament speaker and top negotiator
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. "Everyone needs to know that management of the strait
will never return to the way it was before the war," Ghalibaf said. The strait
has emerged as a key point of contention since the early days of the war, with
Iran insisting that it and Oman, as the two countries bordering the waterway,
should play a role in controlling how it is used and which vessels are allowed
to pass through it. Tehran in May set up a maritime authority, the Persian Gulf
Strait Authority (PGSA), in an effort to consolidate its control. The PGSA would
manage transit through the strait and has said it has engaged with hundreds of
vessels seeking permits to pass safely, in some cases for a toll or fee. The
US-Iran interim deal, signed last week, called for Tehran to ensure movement of
vessels from the Mideast Gulf to the Gulf of Oman, and vice versa, with the aim
of returning traffic to pre-war levels within 30 days — by around 18 July —
while allowing Iran to "remove technical and military obstacles and removal of
mines." Latest data from Kpler show an uptick in seaborne Iranian crude and oil
product exports as of the week starting 15 June, coinciding with the US lifting
the blockade it imposed on Iranian ports in April. Iran has agreed not to charge
tolls for passage through the strait, at least for the initial 60 days. But it
appears intent on keeping the PGSA in control of all traffic. "Of course, we
will fully comply with international law," Ghalibaf said. "But people need to
understand [that administration of the strait will remain with Iran]." He said
the US and Iran have agreed to "establish co-ordination mechanisms there
including a hotline and a centre that can be contacted whenever there is any
ambiguity or dispute." "Because the administration/management of the strait is
with us, we will manage it easily," said Ghalibaf. "If there is any issue, we
will solve it." A tale of two shores But Iran will have to act in co-ordination
with Oman, which controls the strait's southern shore, and the two have held a
meeting that could help institutionalise a new administrative regime. They
agreed to form "a joint working group" to "reach agreement on the future
administration of navigation in the strait of Hormuz and the services that will
be provided in this regard and the costs associated with them in accordance with
international standards," the Omani foreign ministry said on 23 June. Oman's
foreign minister Badr Albusaidi said the sides "affirmed commitment to
international law and toll-free safe passage." Any toll for passage would be
incompatible with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos), notably
Articles 38 and 42 that provide "all ships and aircraft enjoy the right of
transit passage" that "shall not be impeded". Measures adopted by states
bordering a strait must not have "the practical effect of denying, hampering or
impairing the right of transit passage," Unclos states. But Article 42 also says
states bordering straits may adopt laws and regulations relating to transit
passage in respect of the safety of navigation, the regulation of maritime
traffic, and the prevention, reduction and control of pollution. "The services
that will be provided… and the costs associated with them in accordance with
international standards," as mentioned by the Omani foreign ministry, will
require clarification. By Nader Itayim and Andrey Telegin Send comments and
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