Evacuation plan through Hormuz for stranded ships in Gulf underway, UN agency says

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) – An evacuation plan to enable hundreds of ships with ​some 11,000 seafarers stranded in the Gulf to sail through ‌the Strait of Hormuz is underway after Iran and the U.S. reached a ceasefire deal, the United Nations’ shipping agency said on Tuesday.
“We have ​now started contacting the ships to start the evacuation,” ​a spokesperson with the U.N.’s International Maritime Organization (IMO) said, ⁠without providing a timeframe.
The IMO said it had secured the ​necessary safety guarantees and verified conditions for safe navigation.
“This large-scale operation ​will be carried out in close cooperation with Iran, Oman, all other coastal states in the region, the United States and the maritime industry,” IMO ​Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez said in a statement.
The evacuation process under ​the IMO plan, which has been under discussion for months, will be phased, ‌Oman’s ⁠defence ministry said separately in an advisory.
“Given the elevated risk of collision in the current environment, a gradual and controlled evacuation of vessel traffic is required,” it said.
The Omani ministry said ​the so-called Traffic ​Separation Scheme was “not ⁠safe for use at this time” and two temporary routes to north and south of the ​scheme could be used for evacuation.
“Vessels will be ​contacted individually ⁠and advised of their allocated transit day by the parties coordinated by IMO,” the ministry advisory said.
The scheme, adopted by the IMO ⁠in ​1968, established routing lanes through Iranian ​and Omani waters in the strait.
Floating mines are among the major risks with waters ​around Hormuz.

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