Muslim peer to deliver regalia to UK’s King Charles in coronation ceremony

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Updated 22 April 2023
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Muslim peer to deliver regalia to UK’s King Charles in coronation ceremony

  • Set of gold ornamented bracers will be carried by Lord Kamall next month
  • Event to see first-ever involvement of non-Christian representatives in crowning of a British monarch

LONDON: Muslim, Hindu, Sikh and Jewish members of the UK’s House of Lords are set to play a crucial role in the coronation of King Charles next month, presenting him with four pieces of regalia during the ceremony, The Times reported on Saturday.

The event at Westminster Abbey in London will see the first-ever involvement in British history of non-Christian faith representatives in the crowning of a monarch.

Though the four Muslim, Hindu, Sikh and Jewish representatives will not speak during the coronation, they will form a procession to deliver key items to the king as part of a centuries-old tradition.

Lord Kamall, 56, a Conservative Party peer and practicing Muslim, will carry the armills — a set of gold ornamented bracers — to the king.

He will be followed or preceded by Baroness Merron, a Jewish peer, Lord Singh, a Sikh, and Lord Patel, a Hindu, who will deliver a robe, glove and ring respectively.

As head of the Church of England, King Charles has pledged to serve as a defender of all religions.

The ceremony will see the four peers deliver the items on a cushion to the monarch as he sits on the coronation chair.

Each item will then be touched before being transferred to the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who will place them on the king.

Lord Singh told The Times that the plans for the ceremony are a “show of commonality between the religions,” adding: “It stresses the point that (the king) has said again and again that he is defender of the Christian faith but with total respect for all other faiths.”

The four peers held a 90-minute rehearsal of the event at the Buckingham Palace ballroom this week.

Rabbi Jonathan Romain told The Times that the coronation plan is “a very Christian reworking of the gifts of the three magi (to) Jesus in the manger.”

However, he added: “It is clearly a deliberate avoidance of any non-Anglican religious personnel being involved. The peers are representing four faiths, but they are not faith leaders.”

A Lambeth Palace spokesman did not provide details of the coronation plans, saying: “The coronation liturgy will be published in due course and we look forward to sharing more details then.”


Blacklisted naphtha tanker from Russia enters Venezuelan waters while another diverts, ship data shows

Updated 56 min 28 sec ago
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Blacklisted naphtha tanker from Russia enters Venezuelan waters while another diverts, ship data shows

  • Under U.S. sanctions related to Russia, the ship has a different sanctions profile than Skipper, the tanker that was seized by the U.S. on December 10

HOUSTON: A tanker subject to U.S. sanctions carrying some 300,000 barrels of naphtha from Russia entered Venezuelan waters late ​on Thursday, while another began redirecting course in the Atlantic Ocean, ship tracking data showed, a reflection of diverging last-minute decisions by ship owners after President Donald Trump ordered a "blockade" of oil tankers under sanctions bound for the OPEC country earlier this week.
The move ramped up pressure on Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro by targeting the country's main source of income and followed the seizure by the U.S. of an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela earlier in December.
Vessels that were not subject to sanctions began setting sail on Wednesday from Venezuelan waters after a week's pause, helping drain the country's mounting crude stocks.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Trump's 'blockade' aims to halt sanctioned oil tankers to Venezuela

• Hyperion's sanctions profile differs from seized Skipper tanker

• Venezuela condemns US actions as violating international law

Gambia-flagged medium tanker Hyperion docked on Friday at Amuay ‌Bay on Venezuela's ‌western coast, according to LSEG ship tracking data. It loaded near ‌Murmansk ⁠in ​Russia in ‌late November.
Under U.S. sanctions related to Russia, the ship has a different sanctions profile than Skipper, the tanker that was seized by the U.S. on December 10.
The U.S. can only seize vessels outside of its jurisdiction, or vessels that aren't heading to or from the country, if Washington has placed them under sanctions for links to groups it designates as terrorist, said David Tannenbaum, a director at consulting firm Blackstone Compliance Services that specializes in sanctions and anti-money laundering compliance.
Skipper, formerly called the Adisa, was under sanctions for what the U.S. says was involvement in Iranian oil trading that generated ⁠revenue for Iranian groups it has designated as foreign terrorist organizations.
With the Hyperion, though, sanctions were imposed to reduce Russian revenues from energy because of ‌its war with Ukraine.
"The Hyperion doesn't have known ties to ‍terrorism, and therefore unless they can prove it's subject ‍to the jurisdiction of the U.S., Washington can't grab it extraterritorially," said Tannenbaum, who previously worked with the ‍U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control that administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions.

REDIRECTS AND U-TURNS
The Angola-flagged Agate, another medium tanker under sanctions that loaded in Russia and had been sailing toward the Caribbean, was seen redirecting on Friday, according to LSEG ship tracking. The vessel was pointing towards Africa, but had not yet signaled a new destination.
Oman-flagged Garnet, also under sanctions ​and loaded in Russia, continued on its track, signaling the Caribbean as its destination on Friday.
Benin-flagged tanker Boltaris, under sanctions and carrying some 300,000 barrels of Russian naphtha bound for Venezuela, made ⁠a U-turn earlier this month and was heading for Europe without having discharged, according to LSEG vessel monitoring data.
Two very large crude carriers not subject to sanctions set sail for China on Thursday from Venezuela, according to sources familiar with Venezuela's oil export operations, marking only the second and third tankers unrelated to Chevron to depart the country since the U.S. seized Skipper.
The American oil major, which has continued to ship Venezuelan crude under a U.S. authorization, exported a crude cargo on Thursday bound for the U.S., LSEG data showed.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday said the U.S. was not concerned about the four vessels that sailed from Venezuela on Thursday, as those were not ships under sanctions.
"Sanctioned boats, we have the capabilities necessary to enforce our laws. We'll have a judicial order, we'll execute on those orders and there's nothing that will impede us from being able to do that," Rubio said.
Venezuela's government ‌called Trump's blockade a "grotesque threat" in a statement on Tuesday, saying it violates international law, free commerce and the right of free navigation.