Oil tankers near Iran appear to be in rural Russia as signals jammed
Oil tankers near Iran appear to be in rural Russia as signals jammed
LONDON - The Front Tyne oil tanker was sailing through the Gulf between Iran and the United Arab Emirates on Sunday when just past 9:40 a.m. shiptracking data appeared to show the massive vessel in Russia, in fields better known for barley and sugar beets.
By 4:15 p.m., the ship's erratic signals indicated it was in southern Iran near the town of Bidkhun, before later placing it back and forth across the Gulf.
Mass interference since the start of the conflict between Israel and Iran has affected nearly 1,000 ships in the Gulf, according to Windward, a shipping analysis firm.
A collision involving tankers south of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping lane for the world's oil, occurred on Tuesday with both vessels catching fire.
One of them, the Front Eagle, a sister ship of the Front Tyne, and like it, more than three football pitches long, appeared to be onshore in Iran on June 15, data from commodity data platform Kpler showed.
"There is usually no jamming in the Strait of Hormuz and now there is a lot,' said Ami Daniel, chief executive of Windward.
"The culmination of all that is higher risk. It's a hot area... if you don't geolocate, there's a bigger chance you'll have an accident."
Ships are required to indicate their location and are fitted with transmitters similar to GPS called an AIS, or Automatic Identification System, that send regular signals on location, speed and other data. Jamming disrupts these signals.
"The problem these days is that most ships use digitised systems, so if your GPS is jammed, then you have no real form of navigating other than by the seat of your pants," said Jim Scorer, secretary general of International Federation of Shipmasters' Associations.
If a ship's crew intentionally disrupts its signalling, it is called spoofing, and may indicate illegal conduct, such as an effort to conceal a cargo or destination.
If a third party disrupts signals, as is happening in the Gulf, it is referred to as jamming, according to Dimitris Ampatzidis, an analyst at Kpler.
The practice has become increasingly common in conflict areas, as some militaries seek to obscure the location of navy vessels or other potential targets.
Jamming has been observed in the Black Sea during Russian attacks on Ukrainian ports, in the Taiwan Strait and in waters near Syria and Israel, analysts said. Several ships appeared to be on land at Port Sudan last month.
"If you don't know where vessels are, you're unable to target them," said Ampatzidis.
International Maritime Organization, along with other United Nations agencies, issued a statement in March expressing concern over rising cases of interference in global navigation.
The oil tanker Xi Wang Mu, which was placed under U.S. sanctions, appeared to be at a Hindu temple in India earlier this year when it spoofed its location, according to analysis by maritime data platform Lloyd's List Intelligence. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

AsiaOne
3 hours ago
- AsiaOne
Azerbaijan arrests journalists at Russian state outlet as tensions with Moscow rise, World News
BAKU/MOSCOW — Authorities in Azerbaijan arrested two journalists from the local branch of a Russian state news agency on Monday (June 30) in a move likely to further stoke tensions with Moscow following arrests in Russia of ethnic Azerbaijanis suspected of serious crimes. In a statement, Azerbaijan's Interior Ministry said it had launched an investigation into the outlet, Sputnik Azerbaijan, after raiding its offices earlier on Monday. Russia's RIA state news agency said two staff members — the head of the editorial board and the chief editor — had been detained. Azerbaijan's Interior Ministry published video showing officers leading two men to police vans in handcuffs. Another Russian media outlet, Ruptly, later said one of its editors had been detained after trying to film the police action at the Sputnik offices in Baku. Tensions between Russia and Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic in the South Caucasus, have risen in recent days after investigators in Yekaterinburg, a Russian industrial city, arrested six people following a slew of raids in connection with historic unsolved crimes, including serial killings. They said they had detained six people, all of whom had Russian passports, but they also said two suspects had died. Azerbaijan's Interior Ministry identified the people as ethnic Azerbaijanis. One of the suspects died of heart failure, Russian investigators said in a statement, and medical tests would reveal the cause of death of another suspect. The bodies of the suspects are expected to arrive in Baku by plane on Monday evening for expert examination. Baku has accused the Russian police of carrying out extrajudicial killings "on ethnic grounds", an allegation Moscow has rejected. Earlier on Monday, as the raid on Sputnik Azerbaijan was under way, Russia summoned Azerbaijan's ambassador to Moscow over what it described as Baku's "unfriendly actions" and the "illegal detention" of Russian journalists working in the country. Police in Baku said they would investigate Sputnik Azerbaijan over illegal funding. Journalists led away 'like terrorists' In February, the government shuttered the outlet, which is an affiliate of Russian state media agency Rossiya Segodnya, but it has continued to operate with fewer staff. The General Director of Rossiya Segodnya, Dmitry Kiselev, said Sputnik and Azerbaijani officials had been trying to clinch a temporary agreement allowing Sputnik to keep working in Baku. Russia, he wrote on the Telegram messaging app, was shocked at the actions of Azerbaijani security officials leading staff members away "with their arms twisted and their heads bowed, as though they were terrorists". "This all looks like a deliberate step aimed at worsening relations between our countries," he wrote. Azerbaijan's parliament has pulled out of planned bilateral talks in Moscow amid the recent controversy and cancelled a visit by a Russian deputy prime minister. On Sunday, Azerbaijan's Cultural Ministry said it was also cancelling cultural events planned by Russian state and private organisations due to "targeted and extrajudicial killings and acts of violence committed by Russian law enforcement agencies." Asked about the Culture Ministry's decision, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday: "We sincerely regret such decisions." "We believe that everything that's happening (in Yekaterinburg) is related to the work of law enforcement agencies, and this cannot and should not be a reason for such a reaction," Peskov told reporters. [[nid:714283]]

Straits Times
11 hours ago
- Straits Times
Russia jails 'Jesus of Siberia' sect leader for 12 years for harming followers
FILE PHOTO: Vissarion, who has proclaimed himself a new Christ, conducts a service during the \"Holiday of Good Fruit\" feast in a village southeast of Russia's Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, August 18, 2010. Picture taken August 18, 2010. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin/File Photo A Russian sect leader who claimed he was Jesus Christ reincarnated was sentenced to 12 years in a prison camp on Monday after being convicted of harming his followers' health and financial affairs. Sergei Torop, a former traffic policeman known to his followers as 'Vissarion', set up the Church of the Last Testament in a remote but picturesque part of Siberia's Krasnoyarsk region in 1991, the year the Soviet Union broke up. A bearded self-styled mystic with long hair, he claimed to have been "reborn" to convey the word of God and attracted thousands of followers, some of whom flocked to live in a settlement known as the "Abode of Dawn" or "Sun City", at a time when Russia was battling poverty and lawlessness. Torop, 64, told his followers, who regularly intoned prayers in his honour as they looked up to his large hilltop residence, not to eat meat, not to smoke, not to drink alcohol or swear, and to stop using money. But the Investigative Committee, Russia's equivalent of the U.S. FBI, accused Torop and two aides of using psychological pressure to extract money from his followers and of causing serious harm to their mental and physical health. In a statement on Monday, a court in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk said it had convicted the three men, sentencing Torop and Vladimir Vedernikov to 12 years and Vadim Redkin to 11 years in a maximum-security prison camp. They were also ordered to pay 40 million roubles ($511,500) to compensate their victims for "moral damage". All three denied wrongdoing. Torop and the two aides were arrested in a security forces raid by helicopter in 2020 that involved the FSB security service, the successor agency to the Soviet KGB. According to the RIA state news agency, investigators said the men had caused "moral harm" to 16 people, serious damage to the physical health of six people, and moderate damage to another person's health. Vedernikov, one of the aides, had also been accused of committing fraud, RIA said. In a 2017 BBC documentary, filmmaker Simon Reeve interviewed Torop, who denied any wrongdoing. The film showed how school girls whose parents were his followers were being educated to be what a local teacher called "future brides for worthy men." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
14 hours ago
- Straits Times
Azerbaijan arrests journalists at Russian state outlet as tensions with Moscow rise
FILE PHOTO: The Russian flag flies on the dome of the Kremlin Senate building behind Spasskaya Tower in Moscow, Russia June 2, 2025. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina/File Photo BAKU/MOSCOW - Authorities in Azerbaijan arrested two journalists from the local branch of a Russian state news agency on Monday in a move likely to further stoke tensions with Moscow following arrests in Russia of ethnic Azerbaijanis suspected of serious crimes. In a statement, Azerbaijan's interior ministry said it had launched an investigation into the outlet, Sputnik Azerbaijan, after raiding its offices earlier on Monday. Russia's RIA state news agency said two staff members - the head of the editorial board and the chief editor - had been detained. Azerbaijan's interior ministry published video showing officers leading two men to police vans in handcuffs. Tensions between Russia and Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic in the South Caucasus, have risen in recent days after investigators in Yekaterinburg, a Russian industrial city, arrested six people following a slew of raids in connection with historic unsolved crimes, including serial killings. They said they had detained six people, all of whom had Russian passports, but they also said two suspects had died. Azerbaijan's foreign ministry identified the people as ethnic Azerbaijanis. One of the suspects died of heart failure, Russian investigators said in a statement, and medical tests would reveal the cause of death of another suspect. The bodies of the suspects are expected to arrive in Baku by plane on Monday evening for expert examination. Baku has accused the Russian police of carrying out extrajudicial killings "on ethnic grounds", an allegation Moscow has rejected. Earlier on Monday, as the raid on Sputnik Azerbaijan was underway, Russia summoned Azerbaijan's ambassador to Moscow over what it described as Baku's "unfriendly actions" and the "illegal detention" of Russian journalists working in the country. Police in Baku said they would investigate Sputnik Azerbaijan over illegal funding. In February, the government shuttered the outlet, which is an affiliate of Russian state media agency Rossiya Segodnya, but it has continued to operate with fewer staff. Azerbaijan's parliament has pulled out of planned bilateral talks in Moscow amid the recent controversy and cancelled a visit by a Russian deputy prime minister. On Sunday, Azerbaijan's cultural ministry said it was also cancelling cultural events planned by Russian state and private organisations due to "targeted and extrajudicial killings and acts of violence committed by Russian law enforcement agencies." Asked about the culture ministry's decision, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday: "We sincerely regret such decisions." "We believe that everything that's happening (in Yekaterinburg) is related to the work of law enforcement agencies, and this cannot and should not be a reason for such a reaction," Peskov told reporters. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.