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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
Iran-US talks turn to interim deal amid rifts over nuclear work, Iranian sources sayBy Parisa Hafezi, John Irish and Francois Murphy April 16, 2026SummaryIran, US make limited progress, major nuclear gaps remainFocus on temporary deal before truce expiresPossible compromise on highly enriched uranium stockpileDUBAI, April 16 (Reuters) - U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.The shift follows last weekend's inconclusive talks in Islamabad, where deep differences over Iran’s nuclear programme — including the fate of its enriched uranium stockpiles and how long Tehran should halt nuclear work — have continued to threaten progress, despite U.S. officials and Pakistani mediators talking up prospects.A senior Iranian official said the two sides had started to narrow some gaps, including over how to manage the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for about 20% of the world's oil and gas needs that has been closed to most ships for weeks.Iran, which has faced crippling U.S. sanctions for years, wants a memorandum to include Washington unfreezing some Iranian funds, in return for allowing more ships through the strait, said the senior official, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.A source briefed by Tehran said on Wednesday that Iran could let ships sail freely through the Omani side of the Strait of Hormuz without risk of attack under proposals it has offered in talks with the U.S., providing a durable deal is clinched.But more than halfway through a two-week truce, deeper splits remain. The senior official said these included agreeing on the fate of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium (HEU), which the U.S. wants removed, and the duration of any halt to Iranian nuclear work, notably uranium enrichment.Iran has long demanded Washington acknowledge its right to enrich uranium, which Tehran says it only seeks for peaceful purposes but which Western powers and Israel say is aimed at building nuclear weapons.A Western diplomat said the nuclear issue "remains a core obstacle".If a memorandum to halt the conflict is reached, the two sides are expected to have 60 days to negotiate a final deal, which would require involvement of experts and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the Iranian sources said.A previous international deal curtailing Iran's nuclear work in return for sanctions relief was signed in 2015 but it took almost two years to negotiate. President Donald Trump scrapped that pact in 2018.The Iranian sources said the United States is demanding a halt to Iran's nuclear enrichment work for 20 years, while Iran wants to limit it to three to five years. Tehran also wants a timetable for lifting sanctions of U.N., U.S. and EU, they said.Iran has also in the past refused a U.S. demand to ship out its entire stockpile of uranium which has been enriched to 60%, a level that is far higher than levels needed for civilian uses.However, Iranian sources said there were signs a compromise could emerge. One source said that, while Iran was not ready to send all its highly enriched uranium (HEU) abroad, part of it could be sent to a third country.He said some HEU was needed for medical purposes and for a research reactor in Tehran which runs on relatively small amounts of uranium enriched to around 20%.The IAEA estimates Iran had 440.9 kg of uranium enriched to 60% when Israel and the United States launched their first attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities in June 2025. Exactly how much of that has survived is unclear.IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said in March that what remained of that stock was “mainly” stored in a tunnel complex in Isfahan, and that his agency believed slightly more than 200 kg of it was there. It also believes some is at the sprawling nuclear complex at Natanz, where Iran had two enrichment plants.A second Western diplomat said: "The 440 kg HEU remains cause for concern because it allows Iran to have what we call sufficient quantities to build a number of nuclear bombs quite quickly, because the final enrichment phase is relatively quick.”Reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai, John Irish in Paris and Francois Murphy in Vienna, writing by Parisa Hafezi Editing by Peter Graff, William Maclean
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