The Iranian Navy on Tuesday intercepted and turned back a container ship bound for Pakistan via the Hormuz Strait, forcing it to reverse course.
This comes as a major blow for Pakistan, which has offered to mediate the war between Iran and US-Israel forces as it nears a fourth week.
AIS data shows the Saint Kitts and Nevis-flagged vessel at a halt some way off from Iran after it began its journey from Sharjah and was scheduled to arrive at the Karachi Port in Pakistan on March 28.
According to Iranian Navy chief Alireza Tangsiri, the container ship Selen (IMO: 9208459) had been turned back due to "failure to comply with legal protocols and lack of permission" to cross the embattled strait.
Strait of Hormuz: Traffic still far from normal
— MarineTraffic (@MarineTraffic) March 25, 2026
Vessel activity remains highly volatile, with traffic levels significantly below what we’d expect. What’s driving this disruption and who’s still moving through the Strait?
🎙️ Ana Subasic, Trade Risk Analyst at Kpler, breaks down… pic.twitter.com/2TG5XgeH46
He then reiterated that ship transit through the Hormuz Strait was fully dependent on "full coordination with Iran's maritime authority".
کشتی کانتینربر SELEN به دلیل عدم رعایت پروتکلهای قانونی و نداشتن مجوز عبور از #تنگه_هرمز، توسط نیروی دریایی سپاه به عقب بازگردانده شد.
— علیرضا تنگسیری (@alirezatangsiri) March 24, 2026
عبور هرگونه شناور از این آبراهه مستلزم هماهنگی کامل با حاکمیت دریایی ایران است و این مهم جز به پشتوانه مردم شریف ایران به دست نمیآمد. pic.twitter.com/g6ei29Y90Q
This is in line with the "special conditions" that Iran had imposed on the strait, which remain in effect, despite US President Donald Trump's 48-hour ultimatum over the weekend for Iran to either open the waterway, or to see its power plants bombed.
Iran had, at the time, doubled down on the threats, warning "irreversible" destruction of power plants in the region, and also the complete closure of the Hormuz Strait till its own power plants were repaired.
This comes amid the third week of the Gulf chaos as Iran refuses to budge on its 'special conditions' imposed in the Hormuz Strait and has warned against US attacks on its power plants.
— THE WEEK (@TheWeekLive) March 22, 2026
(us iran war israel kharg island ground troops, trump ultimatum)https://t.co/YAZ2ZK59xh pic.twitter.com/PkA5CSYWpD
As the special conditions persist, only selected ships belonging to—or headed to—friendly nations have been allowed to cross the Hormuz Strait.
Two Indian-flagged LPG carriers Pine Gas (IMO: 9315680) and Jag Vasant (IMO: 9307750) are some of the latest vessels that have crossed the strait without damage.
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