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Ships remain on hold in Strait of Hormuz despite announced US-Iran deal

Ships remained stuck in the Strait of Hormuz despite reports of a new US-Iran agreement aimed at easing tensions and reopening the strategic waterway. The deal, mediated by Pakistan, involves the simultaneous lifting of Iran's closure of the strait and the US blockade of Iranian ports. However, experts suggest maritime traffic may still be limited, and exact terms of the agreement have not been officially disclosed. Implementation is expected to begin after the signing, scheduled for Friday in Switzerland.

A small motorboat passes anchored vessels in the Strait of Hormuz off Bandar Abbas, Iran, 11 June 2026

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Copyright © africanews

Amirhosein Khorgooi/ISNA via AP

Last updated:

2 hours ago

Iran

Hundreds of ships remained at a standstill in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, as the United States and Iran reached an initial agreement that would extend their shaky ceasefire and lead to the reopening of the strait.

US President Donald Trump said on Truth Social that vessels were "starting to move, many loaded up with Oil" under the terms of the deal.

But experts who track ship movements disputed this claim, saying traffic is likely to remain limited.

Exact details of the deal, which would potentially allow oil and natural gas to reach the global market through the critical waterway, were not immediately and officially released.

The memorandum of understanding, brokered mainly by Pakistan, starts with the simultaneous lifting of Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the US blockade of Iran’s ports, according to Pakistani officials.

The two sides will then begin 60 days of negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program and the potential lifting of sanctions, they told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because the text is being kept confidential.

Iran signaled implementation would not start until the signing, which Pakistan said would take place Friday in Switzerland.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has roiled international markets and sent prices of fuel and other essential goods, including food, spiralling.

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Source document: US President Donald Trump

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AfricanewsParty-alignedCenter5 days ago
Ships remain on hold in Strait of Hormuz despite announced US-Iran deal

Ships remained stuck in the Strait of Hormuz despite reports of a new US-Iran agreement aimed at easing tensions and reopening the strategic waterway. The deal, mediated by Pakistan, involves the simultaneous lifting of Iran's closure of the strait and the US blockade of Iranian ports. However, experts suggest maritime traffic may still be limited, and exact terms of the agreement have not been officially disclosed. Implementation is expected to begin after the signing, scheduled for Friday in Switzerland.

Bias read (Center): The article presents facts without overtly favoring either side. It includes quotes from both US President Donald Trump and unnamed Pakistani officials, along with expert opinions that challenge Trump's claims. There is no clear ideological framing or biased language.

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  • government US President Donald Trump
  • government Pakistani officials (anonymous)

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  • governmentUS President Donald Trump
  • governmentPakistani officials (anonymous)