South Korea Probes Cargo Ship Fire in Strait of Hormuz Amid Tensions

A South Korean government team is investigating the cause of a fire aboard the HMM Namu cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz. The Panama-flagged vessel arrived in Dubai for inspection by a seven-member team. The fire sparked conflicting claims over whether it was an Iranian attack or an internal malfunction. Separately, Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back will visit the US for talks with Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Key Points: South Korea Probes Ship Fire in Strait of Hormuz

  • South Korean team investigates HMM Namu fire in Dubai
  • Fire occurred in Strait of Hormuz amid US-Iran tensions
  • 25 crew members questioned, moved to Dubai facility
  • Defence Minister Ahn to visit US for OPCON talks
2 min read

Seoul continues inspection into fire on vessel in Strait of Hormuz

South Korean team investigates HMM Namu fire in Strait of Hormuz amid US-Iran tensions. Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back to visit US for talks.

"The incident has fuelled conflicting claims over whether the fire resulted from an Iranian attack or an internal malfunction. - Yonhap news agency"

Dubai, May 9

A South Korean government team continued its investigation Saturday into the cause of a fire aboard a cargo ship operated by Korean shipping firm HMM while it was stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, officials said.

The HMM Namu, a Panama-flagged cargo ship operated by HMM, arrived at Drydocks World Dubai, the Middle East's largest ship repair yard, early on Friday (local time) and has since been undergoing an inspection by a government investigation team, reports Yonhap news agency.

The seven-member team, comprising three investigators from the Korea Maritime Safety Tribunal and four experts from the National Fire Agency, has been reviewing voyage data recorder and closed-circuit television footage, as well as testimony from crew members, officials said.

Twenty-five sailors, including six South Koreans, disembarked from the ship following in-person questioning by the government team on Friday and moved to an accommodation facility in Dubai.

The HMM Namu caught fire Monday while stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, the same day the United States launched "Project Freedom" to help stranded vessels navigate through the waterway amid ongoing tensions between the U.S. and Iran.

The incident has fuelled conflicting claims over whether the fire resulted from an Iranian attack or an internal malfunction.

Meanwhile, Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back will visit the United States next week for talks with US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, as the allies seek to discuss a host of pending issues, including the transfer of wartime operational control (OPCON).

Ahn will make a five-day trip to Washington starting Sunday and plans to hold talks with his American counterpart on Monday (U.S. time), the ministry said. It will be Ahn's first visit to the U.S. as defence minister.

His visit comes as South Korea is seeking to retake wartime command of its troops from the U.S. and pushing to build nuclear-powered submarines with U.S. support.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Yikes, this is a scary reminder of how vulnerable our supply chains are. With tensions between US and Iran still simmering, we're all at risk of something like this spiraling. The conflicting claims about attack vs malfunction don't help either - transparency is key here. 🤞 Hope the investigation is thorough and honest.
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Aditya G
Interesting that South Korea is also pursuing nuclear-powered submarines with U.S. support, just like we've been hearing about for India's navy too. The OPCON transfer talks are significant - Seoul wanting more control over their military mirrors our own discussions about self-reliance. Global defense dynamics are shifting, and this fire in the gulf could be a minor incident that reveals bigger tensions.
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Ravi K
The fact that it took 7 days to even get the investigation started is concerning. These are lives at stake, and we're talking about voyage data recorders and CCTV footage - what if there was evidence tampered in that time? Hope Seoul has strong protocols in place. Also, our own sailors traveling through Hormuz need better safety assurances from the government.

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