Washington Seeks to Seize Iranian Cargo on Liberian Tanker

The Liberia-flagged Achilleas is a vessel known as a Very Large Crude Carrier. (File/MarineTraffic.com)
The Liberia-flagged Achilleas is a vessel known as a Very Large Crude Carrier. (File/MarineTraffic.com)
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Washington Seeks to Seize Iranian Cargo on Liberian Tanker

The Liberia-flagged Achilleas is a vessel known as a Very Large Crude Carrier. (File/MarineTraffic.com)
The Liberia-flagged Achilleas is a vessel known as a Very Large Crude Carrier. (File/MarineTraffic.com)

The US Department of Justice issued a complaint in a US district court to seize the Iranian cargo on the Liberia-flagged Achilleas on Feb. 3, according to Maritime Magazine.

"Participants in the scheme attempted to disguise the origin of the oil using ship-to-ship transfers, falsified documents, and other means, and provided a fraudulent bill of lading to deceive the owners of the Achilleas into loading the oil in question," the Department said.

“The forfeiture complaint filed today serves as a reminder that the IRGC (Revolutionary Guards) and Quds Force continue to exert significant control over the sale of Iranian oil,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John C. Demers.

“As we have demonstrated in the past, the Department will deploy all tools at its disposal to ensure that the IRGC and Quds Force cannot use profits from the sale of Iranian oil to fund terrorism and other activities that threaten the safety and security of all Americans.”

The bulk of the oil that is shipped out of Iran ends up in China. The vessel is known as a Very Large Crude Carrier and is fully loaded, according to shipping documents.

It’s heading to the US and is currently sailing close to the South American coast, according to tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Achilleas’ owner, Capital Ship Management Corp., alerted US authorities to the possibility that it had unknowingly taken on Iranian crude, Bloomberg reported.

The IRGC and the IRGC-QF, both designated as terrorist organizations by the US, use oil money to buy weapons of mass destruction and carry out human rights abuses, according to the Department of Justice.



Thousands Join Effort to Clean Up Catastrophic Spanish Floods

Rescue workers walk, following heavy rains that caused floods, in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, November 1, 2024. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
Rescue workers walk, following heavy rains that caused floods, in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, November 1, 2024. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
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Thousands Join Effort to Clean Up Catastrophic Spanish Floods

Rescue workers walk, following heavy rains that caused floods, in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, November 1, 2024. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
Rescue workers walk, following heavy rains that caused floods, in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, November 1, 2024. REUTERS/Nacho Doce

An arts and science center which normally plays host to opera performances was on Saturday transformed into the nerve center for the clean-up operation after catastrophic floods in eastern Spain which have claimed at least 207 lives.
Volunteers went to Valencia's City of Arts and Sciences for the first coordinated clean-up organized by regional authorities, Reuters reported.
On Friday, the mass spontaneous arrival of volunteers complicated access for professional emergency workers to some areas, prompting authorities to devise a plan on how and where to deploy them.
Carlos Mazon, Valencian regional president posted on X on Friday: "Tomorrow, Saturday, at 7 in the morning, together with the Volunteer Platform, we will launch the volunteer center to better organize, (and) transport the help of those who are helping from the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia."
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez was due to address the nation on Saturday morning.
In some of the worst-hit areas, people have resorted to looting because they have no food or water. Police said on Friday they had arrested 27 people for robbing shops and offices in the Valencia area.
More than 90% of the households in Valencia had regained power on Friday, utility Iberdrola said, though thousands still lacked electricity in cut-off areas that rescuers struggled to reach.
Some 2,000 soldiers were deployed to search for people who are still missing and help survivors of the storm, which triggered a new weather alert in the Balearic Islands, Catalonia and Valencia, where rains are expected to continue during the weekend.
Officials said the death toll is likely to keep rising. It is already Spain's worst flood-related disaster in more than five decades and the deadliest to hit Europe since the 1970s.