Some ships crossed Hormuz on Tuesday, the data shows

Numerous ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz since yesterday (c) morning, tracking data appears to indicate, as Iran says it will pay countries a fee for safe passage via critical waterway. Data from MarineTraff, a maritime intelligence provider and ship tracking, appears [...]
Data from MarineTraff, a marine intelligence provider and ship tracking, seems to indicate that three tankers and a cargo ship have been crossing the strait over the past 24 hours, the Telegrafi broadcast.
But overall traffic is still low in pre-war times. At least 16 attacks have been reported on ships in the Persian Gulf and near the Strait of Hormuz since 28 February, when the conflict began, according to the United Kingdom Marine Trade Operations.
“Iran appears to be following a strategy calibrated in the Hormuz Strait, using the ship's selective passage as strategic signal”, mailed MarineTraff to X, adding that “certain activities could resume”.
CNN cannot independently verify travel as transport data can sometimes show irregularities due to signal gaps and fraud broadcast false signals to deceive tracking systems, reports Telegraph, broadcast Periscope.
Despite the waterway is effectively closed to most vessels, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said on Tuesday that a series of measures are in force for the passage through the Hormuz Strait due to the war situation imposed in Iran”.
The remaining “states that have no connection with this act of aggression can pass through the Strait of Hormuz after necessary co-ordination with Iranian authorities to ensure that the crossing is carried out safely and safely,” he told India Today in an interview. /Periscope












