Feb 2, 2021
The Iranian government has given the crew of a seized South Korean ship permission to leave the country.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said the Islamic Republic made a “humanitarian decision” to release the sailors.
“Following the South Korean government’s request and the assistance of the judiciary within the framework of judicial regulations, the crew of the Korean ship, which was seized on charges of causing environmental pollution in the Persian Gulf, have received permission to leave the country in a humanitarian move by the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the state-run Fars News Agency quoted him as saying on Tuesday.
The Iranian military seized the South Korea-flagged Hankuk Chemi on Jan. 4 in the Persian Gulf. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it seized the ship because it ignored warnings regarding environmental pollution.
The seizure may have been related to frozen Iranian assets in South Korea, though. South Korea was until recently a major importer of Iran’s oil. In May of last year, Seoul stopped purchasing Iranian oil amid pressure from the US government. South Korea is now illegally holding $7 billion in Iranian oil revenues, according to the Iranian government. The previous US administration made significant efforts to pressure countries to stop doing business with the Iranian government.