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70 US-escorted merchant vessels transit Hormuz Strait in 72 hours: report

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70 US-escorted merchant vessels transit Hormuz Strait in 72 hours: report

2026-07-06 09:34 Last Updated At:13:35

Only 70 merchant vessels transited the Strait of Hormuz under U.S.-led escort over the 72-hour period from Thursday to Saturday, according to data released by the United Kingdom Marine Trade Operations (UKMTO) on Sunday -- a figure far below the pre-conflict daily average of 138 ships.

The data, sourced from the U.S.-led Joint Maritime Information Center, showed a steady daily decline in U.S.-coordinated transits: 33 vessels on Thursday, 29 on Friday, and 18 on Saturday.

The Strait of Hormuz currently operates two shipping lanes: the southern route, which runs adjacent to Omani waters, is covered by U.S. escort operations; and the northern route, which falls under Iranian control. Traffic on the U.S.-escorted southern lane has shown no sustained increase, while the actual volume of vessels using the northern lane remains difficult to quantify accurately.

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps continued to conduct radio hails, drone close-range reconnaissance, and tracking surveillance on transiting commercial vessels, maintaining routine operational control over the waterway. Vessels that keep their automatic identification systems active may receive warning calls directing them to divert to the Iranian-controlled shipping lane.

The UKMTO also warned of persistent mine risks in the Strait's waters, with sweeping and survey operations ongoing across the area. Meanwhile, jamming and interference with global navigation satellite systems in the region have become commonplace, posing continued hazards to navigational safety.

70 US-escorted merchant vessels transit Hormuz Strait in 72 hours: report

70 US-escorted merchant vessels transit Hormuz Strait in 72 hours: report

Kiev has refused to accept the bodies of Ukrainian servicemen who died in Konstantinovka in Donetsk, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Sunday.

The ministry on Saturday expressed Russia's readiness to conduct a humanitarian operation in order to hand over the bodies, and proposed that the Ukrainian side stop shelling Konstantinovka from 12:00 to 18:00 on July 6, 2026.

Kiev was given a deadline of noon Sunday to respond through official designated communication channels.

The ministry said more than 20 media editorial boards from different countries and continents expressed their desire to cover the handover, adding that it would organize the work of journalists in Konstantinovka in the event of the consent of the Ukrainian side.

"After reviewing the proposal with its security agencies, the Ukrainian side turned down this initiative," the ministry stated.

Russia claimed on Friday that its armed forces had taken full control of the city of Konstantinovka in the frontline. The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine denied the claim, saying the city is still under the control of the Ukrainian side.

Ukraine refuses to retrieve bodies of fallen troops: Russian Defense Ministry

Ukraine refuses to retrieve bodies of fallen troops: Russian Defense Ministry

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