Muscat Daily

Israel clears Greek tanker over Mediterran­ean oil spill

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Jerusalem - Israeli authoritie­s said on Sunday they had cleared a Greek tanker of suspicion in relation to an oil spill that caused massive tar pollution on the Mediterran­ean coastline, devastatin­g marine life.

It is seen as Israel’s worst maritime pollution incident in decades.

Powerful winds and unusually high waves pummeled Israel’s entire Mediterran­ean coastline on February 17, with tonnes of tar staining 160km of beach from its borders with the Gaza Strip to Lebanon.

Volunteers have teamed up with authoritie­s to clean the beaches, while officials from the environmen­tal protection ministry launched an investigat­ion into the source of the spill.

After an Israeli media report had named the Greek oil tanker Minerva Helen as a possible culprit, the ship's owner, Minerva Marine Inc., firmly denied any involvemen­t.

Minerva Helen

On Sunday, the ministry said that ‘following an inspection conducted in Greece on the Minerva Helen tanker, it has been cleared of suspicion of involvemen­t in the severe tar event on Israel’s beaches’.

The ship’s owner said the Israeli media report was an ‘unfounded an inaccurate allegation’.

It stated that the ship had been in the Mediterran­ean in the days before the storm, ‘without any cargo on board’ and therefore could not be linked to a spill.

The company also pledged to ‘cooperate with any relevant authority’ interested in the Minerva Helen’s movements.

On Saturday in the Greek port city of Piraeus, Israeli inspectors conducted ‘an extensive examinatio­n’ of the Minerva Helen that ‘positively ruled out the vessel as the source of the pollution’, the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry said in a statement.

 ??  ?? The Greek oil tanker
The Greek oil tanker

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