Sri Lanka takes control of second Iranian vessel a day after US sub attack

Kelly Ngand
BBC Sinhala,Colombo
Video of moment US torpedo hits Iranian warship released by Pentagon

Sri Lanka has taken control of an Iranian naval vessel off its coast, a day after the US sunk an Iranian warship in the same waters - in an attack that killed at least 87 people.

The vessel, the Irins Bushehr, had requested on Wednesday to dock at one of Sri Lanka's ports as one of its engines had malfunctioned. Some 208 members of the vessel have been evacuated.

Sri Lanka allowed it to dock at a north-eastern port after hours of discussion, with its president saying they would "never hesitate to protect humanity".

The South Asian country has stressed its neutrality, saying it would take no sides as it finds itself caught in the middle of the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran.

"Our position has been to safeguard our neutrality while demonstrating our humanitarian values," President Anura Kumara Dissanayake said in a statement.

"[Sri Lanka] intervened in a way that demonstrated our commitment to international conventions, protecting the reputation and dignity of our country, and protecting human lives," he said on Thursday.

His statements come after an American submarine on Wednesday torpedoed the Iris Dena - which was struck about 44 nautical miles (81km) off Sri Lanka's southern coast.

The frigate, which was carrying about 180 crew, was part of a multinational naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal. Sri Lanka lies in the Indian Ocean, southeast of India and southwest of the Bay of Bengal.

The sinking of the Iris Dena marked an escalation in the widening Middle East conflict.

News imageReuters A vessel sails off the Galle coast after a submarine attack on the Iranian military shipReuters
Sri Lanka lies in the Indian Ocean, southeast of India and southwest of the Bay of Bengal

Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi called it an "atrocity at sea" and said the US would "bitterly regret" the attack.

US defence secretary Pete Hegseth touted it as an example of America's military prowess, claiming it was "the first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War Two".

While it is the first time since 1945 that an American submarine has sunk an enemy ship this way, the UK and Pakistan have both sunk vessels using torpedoes since then.

The Iris Dena was one of about 20 Iranian navy vessels destroyed since Israel and the US launched coordinated strikes on Iran over the weekend.

And on Thursday, the Iris Bushehr requested permission from Sri Lanka to come into port, citing engine issues.

Dissanayake eventually allowed it to dock at the port of Trincomalee, though the vessel was near the port of Colombo - the country's main commercial port. He added that there was a risk of the country's maritime industr being "adversely affected", should the ship have docked in Colombo.

The crew members of the Iris Bushehr - which include 53 officers, 84 cadet officers, 48 senior sailors and 23 sailors, however, will be brought to Colombo.

As of Thursday, Sri Lanka's navy is also still searching through its waters for crew members of the Iris Dena who are still missing.

The 32 survivors from the Iris Dena are now being treated at a hospital in Galle for serious injuries.

Sri Lanka has maintained a long-standing policy of non-alignment since it became independent in 1948.

It has strong economic and diplomatic ties with both Iran and the US.

Sri Lanka had bought $250 million worth of crude oil from Iran and is paying back through monthly exports of tea. The US, on the other hand, is the primary destination for Sri Lankan garment and apparel.