
Hijack call from ship off Iran a false alarm, security firm Ambrey says
Ambrey first reported the incident south of the busy Strait of Hormuz shipping lane on Tuesday without naming the "UAE-linked" vessel. It said it took place some 51 nautical miles northwest of the Iranian port of Bandar-e Jask.
It dubbed the incident a "false hijack distress call" on Wednesday, adding that it "understands that the vessel had previously conducted similar actions".
Ambrey said it believed the vessel was part of a "shadow fleet" of tankers used by Iran, noting a sister ship was on a sanctions list issued by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

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Scotsman
an hour ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh International Book Festival round-up: Paul French Mark Watson
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Paul French's 2012 book Midnight in Peking, effectively solving a young British girl's gruesome murder there in 1937, was true crime at its most spellbinding. I remember the way he talked about it - in pithy tabloidese, each sentence like a movie pitch. He knows China backwards, having made his money as a marketing expert predicting the country's future while all the time fascinated by its wild, pre-communist, 20th century past. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mark Watson Which is where Wallis Simpson comes in. In French's new book, Her Lotus Year, she arrives in Shanghai because she's heard she'll be able to get a divorce there from her abusive US Navy pilot husband Win ('He's America's first Top Gun. Taller and more handsome than Tom Cruise but with worse planes'). 'Shanghai back then was the maddest place in the world,' said French. 'Whatever you can imagine, times it by ten.' It's a city of warlords, brothels, drugs, famine, and jazz. We know about its degeneracy, because that's what the so-called China Dossier - the one that accused Wallis of sexual practices so outré that when she read it the Queen Mother is reputed to have required smelling salts - spelled out. Yet all that is all fake news, says French. Wallis might have been good at holding her drink, but that's about it. She's an abused woman fleeing a violent husband. She has an independent streak, and finds happiness in Peking, where she gets a sense of style, is taken in by rich friends and becomes more confidently cosmopolitan. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The subtitle of your book is 'China, The Roaring Twenties and the Making of Wallis Simpson',' said journalist Isabel Hilton (another China expert), chairing the event. 'A big claim. Are you sure you can stand it up?' Sure he can. And so to the making of another grande dame forced to flee an abusive husband. Dan Gunn has spent the last seven years editing the first volume of Muriel Spark's letters, from 1944 to 1963, and is hard at work on the second, which takes the story up to her death in 2006. But it's the first volume, he emphasised, where Spark changes the most: from unknown poet to acclaimed writer, where she has the only true love affair in her life (though it ended in betrayal and bitterness), where she suffered real hardship, a miscarriage and attempted rape, had a serious breakdown and two conversions (first to Anglicanism, then Catholicism). Asked why the project had taken so long, Gunn pointed out reasonably enough that working with 40 different archives (half public, half private) took time and, considering that editing Samuel Beckett's letters took him a quarter of a century, 'deciphering the most difficult handwriting in the 20th century in five languages', the Spark letters were a comparative doddle. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The hour sped by for two main reasons. The first was the way in which Gunn communicated the joys of following a trail of writer's letters rather than writing a biography. Instead of telling a linear story arcing towards success, he said, the letters make clear how contingent the whole process is: how much depends on the luck of finding the right publisher at the right time and having supportive patrons and friends – how easily, in other words, everything could go wrong. The second reason was Spark herself, and the delight in seeing her try out her writing wings. I went along later to comedian Mark Watson's sparsely-attended event later on, hoping for laughs, but not for a second did he come close to just one letter Muriel Spark wrote (20 January 1955: look it up) in which she describes a talkative neighbour with a verve only the truly comic writers - Victoria Wood, say, or Alan Bennett - could match. David Robinson


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Haunting moment Iran hangs murderer from crane in front of ghoulish crowd including kids in latest grim public execution
It comes amid a surge in public executions and sham trials REGIME OF DEATH Haunting moment Iran hangs murderer from crane in front of ghoulish crowd including kids in latest grim public execution Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the chilling moment Iran's tyrants hang a murderer from a crane in front of a grim, cheering crowd of locals and children. Sajad Molayi Hakani was killed in the city of Kordkuy, Golestan after being found guilty of robbery and murdering a mum and her three kids in October. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 This is the haunting moment a man is hanged in front of a cheering crowd 3 He is seen attached to a crane by a noose around his neck 3 Crowds of locals and children gathered to watch the horrific event unfold He was sentenced to qisas, which means retaliation in kind in Islamic law, with his wife also due to be executed in prison at a later date. Haunting footage shows the man standing on a platform with a noose around his neck as crowds gather to watch the horrific event. The rope is attached to the crane, which appears to be controlled by a member of the execution team. It comes as rattled supreme leader Ali Khamenei ordered a surge in executions - turning hangings into public spectacles in a chilling warning to dissidents. Read more on World SEA OF STEEL Iran helicopter faces off with US warship in Gulf in pathetic show of force Iran has repeatedly unleashed lethal force on its own people - especially at times of crisis - in a sickening bid to stamp out rebellion. Executions and arrests are weaponised to scare dissidents, and it is feared panicked Ayatollah Khamenei is planning a similar plot to the 1988 massacre of 30,000 political prisoners. The regime was also in turmoil that year after accepting a ceasefire with Iraq. Chillingly, state-run Fars News Agency - a mouthpiece of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps - last month issued a public call to repeat 1998's inhumane massacre as the regime fears for its survival. British politicians and leading human rights lawyers have urged the UK government to intervene to prevent such an atrocity. Alongside the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), they also criticised the focus on Tehran's nuclear programme, warning that it has overshadowed the worsening human rights crisis. Iran Executes Nuclear Scientist Accused of Spying for Mossad Amid Escalating Espionage Crackdown Baroness O'Loan DBE said: "Those threatening our national security are the same individuals planning atrocities in Iran's prisons. So, we must act, now." Dowlat Nowrouzi, the NCRI's UK representative, told The Sun: "The international community's failure to hold the regime accountable for its atrocities, including crimes against humanity and genocide, has allowed the regime to enjoy impunity. "It is long overdue to hold Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, and others accountable for committing these crimes." Earlier this year, Saeed Masouri, who spent 25 years behind bars, also revealed how the execution rate has spiralled. In June alone, the regime's merciless killing spree saw at least 176 inmates sent to the gallows. Masouri, who was arrested for his affiliation with the resistance unit People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran, revealed the secret process behind executions. Psychological torture, threats against family and sham trials are all used as tools by the regime to condemn its enemies to death on trumped-up charges. Defendants - and their lawyers - are often even denied access to their own files, making it near impossible to be cleared. Hossein Abedini, deputy director of the NCRI offices in the UK, said paranoid rules were hellbent on stamping out repression. He told The Sun: "Executions under the clerical regime contravene all internationally recognised standards and norms of due process and are fundamentally used as a political instrument of repression. "Faced with deep-rooted crises stemming from illegitimacy, corruption, and incompetence, and driven by fear of popular uprisings and nationwide protests, this regime has resorted to increasing executions. "It employs inhumane pressures on political prisoners, torturing and harassing them and their families. "As a result, the rate of executions in Iran is rising at an unprecedented level in recent decades, with death sentences issued even for political prisoners arrested during the September 2022 uprising."


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Ukrainian man arrested in Italy over Nord Stream pipeline attacks
BERLIN/MILAN, Aug 21 (Reuters) - A Ukrainian man was arrested at a holiday bungalow in Italy on suspicion of coordinating attacks on three Nord Stream gas pipelines in 2022, officials said on Thursday, a breakthrough in an episode that sharpened tensions between Russia and the West. Described by both Moscow and the West as an act of sabotage, the explosions largely severed Russian gas supplies to Europe, prompting a major escalation in the Ukraine conflict and squeezing energy supplies on the continent. No one has taken responsibility for the blasts and Ukraine has denied any role. The arrest comes just as Kyiv is engaged in fraught diplomatic discussions with the United States over how to end thewar in Ukraine without giving away major concessions and swathes of its own territory to Russia. "Politically we are firmly on Ukraine's side and will continue to be so," said Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig when asked if the arrest would affect Berlin's ties to Kyiv. "What is important for me is that Germany is a country of law, and crimes in our jurisdiction are fully investigated." The suspect, identified only as Serhii K. under German privacy laws, was part of a group of people who planted devices on the pipelines near the Danish island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea, a statement from the prosecutor's office said. He and his accomplices had set off from Rostock on Germany's northeastern coast in a sailing yacht to carry out the attack, it said. The vessel had been rented from a German company with the help of forged identity documents via middlemen, it added. Authorities acted on a European arrest warrant for the suspect, who faces charges of collusion to cause an explosion, anti-constitutional sabotage and destruction of important structures. An official in the Ukrainian president's office said he could not comment as it was not clear who had been arrested. The official reiterated Ukraine's denial of any role in the blasts. Successive Ukrainian governments have seen the pipelines as a symbol of, and vehicle for, Russia's hold over European energy supplies that Kyiv argued made it hard to act against Moscow ever since Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014. The Wall Street Journal reported that the suspect was a retired captain in Ukraine's armed forces and previously served in Ukraine's security service SBU, as well as in an elite unit that defended Kyiv in the early months of Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022. The officer purportedly headed a team of two soldiers and four civilian divers covertly recruited by a special Ukrainian military unit to lay explosives that damaged the undersea pipelines, the WSJ said, citing investigators. German prosecutors declined to comment on the WSJ report. Carabinieri officers arrested the suspect overnight in San Clemente on Italy's Adriatic coast, where he was supposed to spend a few days with his family. "Once his presence had been verified, the Carabinieri surrounded the bungalow and launched a raid, during which the man surrendered without resistance," a statement by the Carabinieri said, adding the suspect was 49 years old. A police official told Reuters the suspect was arrested because, when providing documents at a hotel check-in, an alert flagging he was wanted popped up at the police headquarters, which dispatched a Carabinieri police patrol. In September 2022, one of the two lines of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline was damaged by mysterious blasts, along with both lines of Nord Stream 1 that carried Russian gas to Europe. Moscow, without providing evidence, blamed Western sabotage for the blasts, which cut off most Russian gas supplies to the lucrative European market. The U.S. denied having anything to do with the attacks. The Washington Post and Germany's Der Spiegel magazine have previously said the team that carried out the attack was put together by a former Ukrainian intelligence officer, who denied involvement. In January 2023, Germany raided a ship that it said may have been used to transport explosives and told the United Nations it believed trained divers could have attached devices to the pipelines at about 70 to 80 metres deep. The boat, leased in Germany via a Poland-registered company, contained traces of octogen, the same explosive that was found at the underwater blast sites, according to the investigations by Germany, Denmark and Sweden. Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 triggered Europe's deadliest conflict in 80 years, in which analysts say more than 1 million people have been killed or injured.