INTERNATIONAL — April 21, 2026

Ten Indian Vessels Cross Strait of Hormuz as Fourteen Remain Stranded Amid Regional Tensions

Ten Indian-flagged vessels have crossed the Strait of Hormuz while fourteen remain stranded amid rising regional tensions and recent maritime incidents. India is engaging in diplomatic talks with Iran to ensure safe passage as U.S. pressure on Tehran continues to disrupt shipping routes.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Khaama Press2 min read

Ten Indian Vessels Cross Strait of Hormuz as Fourteen Remain Stranded Amid Regional Tensions
Image courtesy Khaama Press

Ten Indian-flagged vessels have successfully navigated the Strait of Hormuz, while fourteen others remain stranded in the region amid escalating maritime tensions. The movement of the ships follows recent incidents involving Indian-flagged carriers, with two vessels coming under fire. Officials reported that the attacks caused only minor damage and resulted in no casualties.

India’s foreign ministry has maintained continuous diplomatic contact with Iranian authorities to secure safe passage for the remaining fleet and safeguard the country’s energy imports. New Delhi’s efforts come as regional maritime traffic faces significant disruption due to heightened geopolitical friction and recent enforcement actions in the Persian Gulf.

The surge in tensions follows United States measures targeting Iranian-linked shipping, including the seizure of a vessel and new restrictions on Iranian port operations. Donald Trump stated that maritime pressure on Tehran will persist until a formal agreement is reached. Iranian officials have rejected the prospect of negotiations under duress and issued warnings of potential retaliation against further restrictions.

As diplomatic channels remain active, Indian authorities continue to monitor the situation closely. The safe transit of oil and liquefied petroleum gas carriers through the strategic waterway remains a priority for New Delhi, which relies heavily on uninterrupted maritime routes for its energy supply chain. The status of the fourteen stranded vessels remains under review as regional security conditions evolve.

Read the original reporting at Khaama Press

Reliability assessment

Single-source report, but meets the reliable threshold per guidelines due to direct, on-record attribution (India’s foreign ministry, Donald Trump), specific verifiable details (exact vessel counts, named geographic chokepoint, incident specifics), and clear contextual framing. No cross-source comparison possible as only one outlet was provided.

The source language reads straight.

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InternationalStrait of Hormuz, India, Iran, United States, Maritime Security

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