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Only nine commercial ships detected crossing the Hormuz Strait since Monday
Only nine oil tankers, cargo and container ships, some of which at times concealed their position, have been recorded crossing the Strait of Hormuz since Monday, according to MarineTraffic data analysed by AFP.
After three ships were attacked on Sunday, at least three tankers and a vessel carrying gas have crossed this chokepoint.
Nearly 20 percent of the world's crude oil and about 20 percent of liquefied natural gas (LNG) usually transit through Strait of Hormuz.
Only vessels that emitted at least one signal on either side of the Strait of Hormuz were counted by AFP, excluding any others that may have travelled with their signals entirely concealed for a long period of time.
Attacks since Sunday have multiplied against ships navigating Hormuz, raising concerns about a lasting impact on the global economy as the US-Israel war on Iran and Tehran's retaliatory attacks across the Gulf region have upended the world's energy sector.
"Some tankers are still travelling east and west through the strait, with a number of voyages occurring under AIS blackouts," noted Matt Wright, an analyst at Kpler, which publishes MarineTraffic, on Wednesday.
One example is the tanker Kavomaleas, which emitted a signal east of the straight on March 3 and then another in the Gulf about 14 hours later.
-- Sanctioned ships --
Another example is a 130-meter container ship registered in Panama, which left Pakistan on Monday. Having arrived at the entrance to the Gulf on Wednesday night, it has been inside the strait since Thursday morning.
The Pushpak, a vessel designed for transporting petroleum products, left the Gulf on Thursday evening, having departed from an Iraqi port.
The Hout, a cargo ship registered in the Comoros, left Dubai on Tuesday bound for a port in southeastern Iran.
The Danuta I, a 225-meter natural gas carrier under US sanctions, crossed the Strait of Hormuz at dawn on Friday.
The Athina, spotted by the Financial Times, was east of the strait on February 28 and transmitted a position to MarineTraffic west of Hormuz on March 1.
It loaded oil in Bahrain before resuming its journey towards the strait but has not transmitted any signal since Thursday afternoon.
It is one of at least five ships belonging to the Dynacom company that have crossed the strait since the start of the war, all with their transponders switched off, according to the FT.
Most carriers have suspended their operations and the passage remains perilous, as demonstrated by the Safeen Prestige, which was hit by projectiles while sailing east from the Gulf on Tuesday, according to the British Maritime Safety Organisation (UKMTO).
lam-vr-jwp-ys/lmc/giv
J.V.Jacinto--PC