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South Korea begins probe into ship fire in Strait of Hormuz amid Iran dispute

By Thomson Reuters May 8, 2026 | 3:39 AM

SEOUL, May 8 (Reuters) – South Korea’s Oceans Ministry said on Friday that government investigators had started examining the cause of an explosion and fire aboard a Korean-operated vessel amid ​uncertainty over whether it had been attacked in the ‌Strait of Hormuz.

• The ship’s operator HMM said investigators dispatched from South Korea boarded the vessel at around 0600 GMT after it had been towed to a port in Dubai.

• The spokesperson said it was to early to estimate ‌when ​the probe would conclude.

• HMM earlier confirmed ⁠the ship, HMM Namu, ⁠completed berthing in Dubai by 2300 GMT on Thursday.

• The ship suffered an explosion and fire in the engine-room area on Monday while anchored near the United Arab Emirates, according to the ​company and Seoul officials.

• All 24 crew members, including six South Koreans, were unharmed.

• U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran had ⁠fired at the South Korean vessel, ⁠and urged South Korea to join U.S.-led efforts to ​secure shipping through the strait.

• South Korea’s presidential office said on ​Wednesday it had suspended a review of whether to join ‌the U.S. escort operation, dubbed “Project Freedom”, after Trump put the plan on hold.

• Iran’s embassy in South Korea denied responsibility, saying it “firmly rejects and categorically denies” allegations that Iranian armed forces were involved ⁠in damage to the vessel.

• Iran’s state-run Press TV later carried commentary suggesting a South Korean vessel had been targeted, but the Iranian embassy ⁠said the article ‌was outside commentary and did not represent Tehran’s ⁠official position.

• South Korea has said it is keeping ​all ‌possibilities open, including whether the damage was caused ​by an ⁠external attack or an internal malfunction, while prioritising fact-finding before deciding any response.

• The Strait of Hormuz normally carries about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, making the incident sensitive for South Korea, which depends heavily on imported energy.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok ShimEditing ​by Ed Davies)