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Firm maintains tanker attack theory

Company dismisses reports it was hit by freak wave

A Japanese shipping company has maintained that its oil tanker was likely attacked in the Strait of Hormuz, dismissing reports it may have been hit by a freak wave.
 
Mitsui OSK Lines officials reiterated at a Tokyo press conference that crew members saw a flash and heard an explosion in the incident shortly after midnight local time on Wednesday in the waterway between Iran and Oman.
 
"There are some reports saying the tanker was hit by strong waves, but it's quite unlikely," said Mitsui safety management official Masahiko Hibino on Thursday.
 
"We have not reached a conclusion, but we still suspect" the tanker was hit by a blast, Hibino said of the mysterious incident some 18km off the coast of Oman, in which one crewman was slightly injured.
 
He said the company had not changed its stance since Wednesday when it said it suspected it had been attacked, perhaps by terrorists.
 
US and British naval officials were on Thursday inspecting the ship, he said.
 
The Japan-bound vessel - crewed by 16 Filipinos and 15 Indians - was carrying 270,000 tonnes of crude oil but did not suffer a spill.
 
One of the crew saw a flash on the horizon at the time, while several other sailors heard an explosion, Hibino said, adding that the weather was fine and there were no reports of high waves in the region.
 
Hibino displayed images of the tanker, the M Star, which showed damage to the railings, the loss of a life vessel, a shattered window, and broken furniture and fittings and shattered glass inside a dry cabin.
 
Pictures of the outside of the vessel showed an indentation several metres across in the hull, but no obvious burn marks or signs of an explosion.
 
The ship arrived late on Wednesday under its own steam in Fujairah for repairs.
 
Investigations there began early on Thursday, involving officers from the US Navy and Britain's Maritime Trade Operations, Mitsui officials said.
 
The Strait of Hormuz, less than 100km at its widest point, separates Oman from Iran and is the gateway into the Gulf.
 
Japan, the world's second biggest economy, sources some 90 per cent of its oil from the Middle East, much of it from the Gulf.
 
In Dubai, the official news agency WAM had earlier quoted an official as saying the tanker bore no external signs of an attack. A UAE port official said the tanker was hit by a "high wave caused by a tremor", said the agency.
 
The US Geological Survey, which records earthquakes worldwide, lists no major seismic events in the region for the time of the incident.

 
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