Strait Up Maritime Daily Brief · Thursday, June 18, 2026
AI-GENERATED ANALYSIS
Daily Maritime Sanctions Brief — 18 June 2026
Important: This summary was automatically generated by AI from a public-domain government source. It is provided for general information and SEO indexing only. It is not legal, compliance, or professional advice and may contain errors, omissions, or out-of-date information. Where IMO numbers appear in the summary, they may be hyperlinked to the corresponding entry in our sanctioned-vessels database for convenience — these links are direct citations, not editorial assertions. Always verify against the official source before making any compliance, commercial, or legal decision. Read our news policy.
Key facts
Source:Strait Up Maritime Daily Brief (UK HM Treasury, Open Government Licence v3.0)
A total of 2,952 vessels are currently active on sanctions lists. In the last 24 hours, there were no new vessel designations, no delistings, and no changes to vessel flags, names, or operators.
During the last 24 hours, 25 sanctioned vessels were identified at various chokepoints. In Northwest Europe, the ABBA (IMO 9051624, Iran flag) and the Vladimir Latyshev (IMO 9921996, Russia flag) were recorded. One vessel, the NS COLUMBUS (IMO 9312884, Gabon flag), was noted at the Suez chokepoint. The Red Sea saw one vessel, the ANATOLY KOLODKIN (IMO 9610808, Panama flag). One vessel was identified at the Malacca chokepoint: the NS ANTARCTIC (IMO 9413559, Gabon flag).
Other monitored locations included the Western Mediterranean, where the Marie De Lourdes I (IMO 8688183, Malta flag) and the NS Creation (IMO 9312896, Gabon flag) were present. Additional vessel activity was recorded at various ports, including the NASHA (IMO 9079107, Iran flag) at port_BRADR and port_CNYPG, the Arno Babajanyan (IMO 9163764, unknown flag) at port_RUKOZ and port_RUNJK, and the Ascalon (IMO 9198226, Russia flag) at port_RULED.
Source: live sanctions list data aggregated from the publishing government authorities cited above. Verify every listing against the issuing authority's official notice before relying on it for compliance.
Source:Strait Up Maritime sanctions data (live) This is an original article generated by Strait Up Maritime from publicly available sanctions list data. Underlying designations are published by: U.S. Treasury OFAC (SDN list, public domain), UK OFSI (consolidated list, Open Government Licence v3.0), European Council (CFSP regulations, EU re-use policy 2011/833/EU), United Nations Security Council (1267/1718/1591 lists, public domain), Australian DFAT (consolidated list, Commonwealth CC-BY 4.0), Global Affairs Canada (SEMA list, Canada OGL), Japan Ministry of Finance, Swiss SECO, and New Zealand DPMC. Verify every listing against the cited authority's official notice before relying on it for compliance. View live diff data · Report a correction
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Disclaimer. Strait Up Maritime aggregates and summarises sanctions-related news from public-domain government sources (US Treasury OFAC, UK OFSI). Summaries are generated automatically by AI and may contain inaccuracies. We do not warrant the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of any content on this page. Strait Up Maritime is a journalism and information service — it is not a substitute for legal counsel, regulatory advice, or official sanctions verification. Use of this content is governed by our Terms of Use and News Aggregation Policy.