On the wire

UN begins phased evacuation of ships from Gulf

24th June 2026

The UN’s shipping agency has initiated a controlled process to evacuate hundreds of vessels stranded in the Gulf, signalling cautious progress in restoring normal maritime traffic amid ongoing tensions and safety concerns.

The United Nations’ shipping agency has started the slow process of moving hundreds of vessels out of the Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz, in a sign that the ceasefire between the United States and Iran is allowing maritime traffic to begin edging back towards normal. According to the International Maritime Organisation, around 11,000 seafarers have been stranded in the area and ships are now being contacted one by one to arrange departure. The agency said it had received safety guarantees and verified that conditions were suitable for navigation, while stressing that the operation would be coordinated with Iran, Oman, the United States and the maritime industry.

The move is being treated as an important operational step, but not as a return to unrestricted passage. Oman’s defence ministry said the evacuation would be phased and tightly controlled because current conditions still carry an elevated collision risk. It warned that the standard Traffic Separation Scheme through the strait is not safe for use and said two temporary routes, to the north and south of the usual lanes, would be used instead. Vessels are being given assigned transit days rather than allowed to move freely, underlining that the waterway remains under exceptional management.

That caution reflects warnings issued by the IMO earlier in the crisis. In April, secretary-general Arsenio Dominguez said there was no safe transit through Hormuz amid the threat of mines and dangers to ships, and called for seafarers trapped in the region to be released. The organisation has also said it has been monitoring the wider Middle East situation closely, with thousands of seafarers affected by the instability and global trade disrupted by the insecurity around the strait.

For oil markets and insurers, the first evacuations will matter less as evidence of a full reopening than as a sign that the ceasefire is holding well enough for practical co-operation to resume. Yet the careful sequencing of the operation, together with the warnings from Oman and the continued concern over floating mines, suggests normal tanker flows through Hormuz are still some way off. Until routine commercial movement resumes outside escorted or individually managed transits, the risk premium around the strait is likely to remain in place.

Source Reference Map

Inspired by headline at: [1]

Sources by paragraph:
– Paragraph 1: [2], [5]
– Paragraph 2: [1]
– Paragraph 3: [3], [4]
– Paragraph 4: [1], [3], [5]

Source: Noah Wire Services

Verification / Sources

Noah Fact Check Pro

The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.

Freshness check

Score: 10

Notes: The article is dated June 23, 2026, and reports on the recent commencement of evacuations by the UN’s International Maritime Organization (IMO) of approximately 11,000 seafarers stranded in the Gulf due to the US-Iran conflict. This event is current and has not been previously reported, indicating high freshness.

Quotes check

Score: 9

Notes: The article includes direct quotes from IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez and Oman’s Defence Ministry. These quotes are consistent with statements from official IMO press releases and Omani government communications dated June 23, 2026. No discrepancies or variations in wording were found, suggesting accurate reporting. However, the absence of independent verification of these quotes from other reputable sources slightly reduces the score.

Source reliability

Score: 6

Notes: The primary source, InvestingLive, is a niche financial news outlet. While it provides timely reporting, its credibility is not as established as major news organisations. The article references official IMO and Omani sources, which are reliable. However, the reliance on a single, less-established news outlet for the initial report raises concerns about source reliability.

Plausibility check

Score: 8

Notes: The reported evacuation of 11,000 seafarers aligns with the scale of the crisis in the Strait of Hormuz following the US-Iran conflict. The involvement of the IMO, Iran, Oman, and the United States in coordinating the evacuation is plausible and consistent with international maritime protocols. However, the complexity of coordinating such an operation raises questions about the feasibility of its swift execution.

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