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Sri Lanka repatriates 238 stranded Iranian sailors: Minister Published Apr 15, 2026, STCOLOMBO - Sri Lanka has repatriated 238 Iranian sailors stranded in the South Asian country after one of their warships was torpedoed by a US submarine, a minister told AFP on April 15.Deputy Defence Minister Aruna Jayasekara said 32 sailors rescued from the IRIS Dena – a frigate attacked on March 4 just off Sri Lanka – and another 206 from the IRIS Bushehr left on April 14.“A few sailors from the IRIS Bushehr are staying back to operate the vessel, but 206 joined those rescued from the IRIS Dena and returned home last night in a chartered aircraft,” Mr Jayasekara said.Official sources said 15 Iranian sailors will remain in Sri Lanka to operate the IRIS Bushehr, which is anchored off Trincomalee in the north-east of the island.The attack on the IRIS Dena brought the Middle East conflict into the Indian Ocean, killing 104 sailors in the early days of the US and Israeli war against Iran, according to Iranian authorities.The bodies of 84 victims were recovered and have been repatriated.In March, Iran’s ambassador to Sri Lanka Alireza Delkhosh said Tehran was in talks with Colombo to repatriate sailors from the IRIS Bushehr which was given safe harbour in Sri Lanka after the IRIS Dena was sunk.Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake said the island provided protection to the Bushehr crew on humanitarian grounds in line with the 1907 Hague Convention.It was not immediately clear on what basis the sailors from the second Iranian vessel were allowed to leave Sri Lankan custody.Sri Lanka has refused permission for US warplanes to use ground facilities in the country in order to maintain Colombo’s neutrality.A third Iranian ship – the IRIS Lavan, with 183 crew members – sought shelter in India’s Kochi port in early March.More than 100 non-essential crew of the IRIS Lavan have since left India. AFP
Exclusive: Iran negotiators, citing possible Israeli attack, got Pakistan escort home from peace talksBy Saad Sayeed and Mubasher BukhariApril 17, 2026SummaryEscort was provided after discussions on Israeli threat, sources sayPakistan deployed some 20 jets, AWACS for mission, sources sayAir force used its top jet, Chinese-made J-10, source saysSimilar escort could be provided for next round, source saysISLAMABAD, April 17 (Reuters) - Pakistan's air force escorted Iranian negotiators home from inconclusive peace talks with the U.S. last weekend, launching a major operation after the Iranians said Israel might seek to kill them, three sources told Reuters.Pakistan deployed some two dozen jets in the escort, as well as the force's Airborne Warning and Control System for aerial surveillance to ensure the safety of the delegation back from Islamabad, said two Pakistani sources with knowledge of the operation.One said similar security protection would be provided for subsequent talks if the Iranians ask for it, "otherwise Pakistani aircraft would receive them in Pakistan airspace".A third source involved in the talks said measures were already in the works ahead of an expected further round of talks as soon as this weekend.'THEY MIGHT BE TARGETED'A regional diplomat briefed by Tehran, however, said Pakistan insisted on the escort after Iranian delegates raised the "hypothetical" possibility of a threat.The discussions with the Iranian delegation about a potential threat while travelling and the presence of a Pakistani air escort into Iran have not previously been reported.The Israeli prime minister's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Iran's permanent mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Pakistan's air force and military did not respond to questions about the operation. The U.S. embassy in Islamabad did not respond to a request for comment."When the talks failed, the Iranians were wary that things had not gone right. It was their suspicion that they might be targeted," one security source said."This was a massive operational mission if you look at it from a pilot's point of view. You are taking responsibility for a delegation that is coming for talks, you are giving them air cover, you have potent fighters that counter any threat," he said.The source involved in the talks, the highest-level engagement between the two countries since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, confirmed the air escort but did not provide details about the operation."We dropped them all the way to Tehran. Their security was our responsibility even beyond their time here," the source said.Sunday's mission to Iran included Chinese-made J-10 aircraft, the top jet in the Pakistani air force fleet, one official said.ISRAELI STRIKE LISTThe Iranian delegation, led by Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, a former military officer and certified pilot, requested the security escort, which goes well beyond normal protocol, the two security sources said.The regional diplomat said the Iranians did not make a formal request but also did not "rule out the possibility that Israel could even strike the aircraft", prompting Pakistan to insist on providing a security escort.The delegation did not land in Tehran, the diplomat said, declining to say where they were dropped off.Israel had Araqchi and Qalibaf on its strike list until Pakistan asked Washington to intervene to have them removed because there would be no one left to negotiate on the war the U.S. and Israel launched on February 28.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month, "I wouldn't issue life insurance policies on any of the leaders of the terrorist organisation," referring to Iran. "I don't intend to provide an exact report here about what we are planning or what we are going to do."Shortly before agreeing to a ceasefire last week, U.S. President Donald Trump posted on social media: "A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don't want that to happen, but it probably will."Hours after Iranians and the U.S. delegation, led by Vice President JD Vance, left Pakistan empty-handed, sources told Reuters that dialogue was still alive.Trump said on Thursday that the war "should be ending pretty soon" and that talks could take place in Islamabad this weekend.Reporting by Saad Sayeed, Mubasher Bukhari and Ariba Shahid in Islamabad; Additional reporting by Jerusalem bureau; Editing by William Mallard
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