US Secretary of State: Iran does not control Strait of Hormuz

Pompeo’s statement came after the head of the navy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Gen. Alireza Tangsiri, said that Iran had full control of the Strait. (File photo: AFP)
Updated 28 August 2018
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US Secretary of State: Iran does not control Strait of Hormuz

  • Pompeo’s statement came after the head of the navy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said that Iran had full control of the Strait
  • The Strait is a major shipping route between Oman and Iran where nearly one-third of the world’s sea-traded oil passes through daily.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Tuesday that Iran does not control the Strait of Hormuz, which he said is an international waterway.

Pompeo’s statement came after the head of the navy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Gen. Alireza Tangsiri, said that Iran had full control of the Strait, Reuters reported.

The Strait is a major shipping route between Oman and Iran where nearly one-third of the world’s sea-traded oil passes through daily.

However, the secretary of state said that “the United States will continue to work with our partners to ensure freedom of navigation and free flow of commerce in international waterways.”

 


UK teenager who praised Southport murderer jailed for possessing Al-Qaeda manual

Updated 4 sec ago
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UK teenager who praised Southport murderer jailed for possessing Al-Qaeda manual

  • Morgan told a psychiatric nurse on the ⁠morning of his arrest in June that he “planned to commit a Rudakubana-style terrorist attack“
  • The teenager twice tried to buy a 15-centimeter kitchen knife from Amazon

LONDON: A British teenager who praised the killer of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance event and said he planned to bomb British rock band Oasis’ reunion concert was sentenced to detention on Friday for possession of an Al-Qaeda manual.
McKenzie Morgan, 18, was arrested at his home in Wales after sending messages on social media platform Snapchat in which he praised Axel Rudakubana, who murdered three girls and stabbed 10 others in July 2024, prosecutor Corinne Bramwell said.
Morgan told a psychiatric nurse on the ⁠morning of his arrest in June that he “planned to commit a Rudakubana-style terrorist attack” and had been researching how to stab people, Bramwell told Morgan’s sentencing hearing at London’s Old Bailey court.
The teenager twice tried to buy a 15-centimeter (6-inch) kitchen knife from Amazon, searched online for local playgrounds and a youth ⁠dance academy and put the academy on a document on his mobile phone entitled “places to attack,” Bramwell added.
She said Morgan later told another Snapchat user that he planned to bomb the Oasis concert in Cardiff last July 4, the band’s first gig of their comeback tour, and claimed to have tried to make the deadly poison ricin.
He was arrested on June 2 and a 188-page Al-Qaeda training manual was found on one of his electronic ⁠devices. Morgan pleaded guilty to a single count of possession of information likely to be of use to a person engaged in terrorism.
Morgan accepted having saved the Al-Qaeda manual and reading it, but told police he had no intention to commit an attack and simply intended to shock others with his messages.
He has been diagnosed with autism and two psychiatrists assessed Morgan as being vulnerable to being groomed or radicalized online, Bramwell told the court.
Judge Sarah Whitehouse sentenced Morgan to 14 months’ detention in a young offenders’ institution.