Second Iranian ship nears Sri Lanka after submarine attack

A second Iranian warship was heading towards Sri Lanka's territorial waters Thursday, a day after a US submarine destroyed an Iranian frigate, killing at least 87 sailors, a minister told parliament. (REUTERS)
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Updated 05 March 2026
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Second Iranian ship nears Sri Lanka after submarine attack

  • Media minister Nalinda Jayatissa said the second Iranian navy vessel was just outside Sri Lanka’s territorial waters
  • It was feared that this vessel could be targeted the same way a sister vessel was sunk by a US submarine

GALLE, Sri Lanka: A second Iranian warship neared Sri Lankan waters on Thursday, a minister told parliament, a day after a US submarine destroyed an Iranian frigate, killing at least 84 sailors.
Media minister Nalinda Jayatissa said the second Iranian navy vessel was just outside Sri Lanka’s territorial waters, but gave no further details.
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake was meeting top officials on Thursday to discuss a response to an Iranian request to enter the safety of the island’s waters, official sources said.
They said the craft identified as IRIS Bushehr was carrying nearly 300 crew and cadets.
It was feared that this vessel could be targeted the same way a sister vessel was sunk by a US submarine just off Sri Lanka’s southern coast on Wednesday.
The sinking of IRIS Dena came as the war sparked by a joint US-Israel attack on Iran continued to spread across the Middle East and beyond.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Thursday denounced the attack and warned Washington it would “bitterly regret” establishing such a precedent.
“The US has perpetrated an atrocity at sea, 2,000 miles away from Iran’s shores. Frigate Dena, a guest of India’s Navy carrying almost 130 sailors, was struck in international waters without warning,” he posted on X.
“Mark my words: The US will come to bitterly regret precedent it has set.”
Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath said he spoke with Araghchi on Wednesday to “express grave concern” over the escalation of hostilities and called for diplomatic dialogue.
Meanwhile, authorities began an inquest into the deaths of the sailors at the southern port city of Galle while the chief magistrate Sameera Dodangoda ordered autopsies.
The morgue at Galle can handle about 25 bodies at a time, but those of the 84 Iranian sailors were brought there on Wednesday.
Hospital staff said the authorities were rushing to set up refrigerated shipping containers to preserve the remains until legal formalities were completed.
Navy spokesman Buddhika Sampath said authorities were continuing the search for missing sailors.
Sri Lanka earlier said that there were 180 people on board the ship — more than the Iranian figure — when it was struck by a torpedo, in what the US defense secretary called “quiet death.”

- Tight protection -

Medical staff said 32 rescued Iranians were still being treated under tight security provided by police and elite commandos at the hospital, adding that the walking wounded would be discharged soon.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was assessing the situation and was working with the local authorities.
“Our priority is to ensure that all the wounded, sick and shipwrecked receive the assistance they are entitled to without delay,” the ICRC spokesperson in Colombo, Ruwanthi Jayasundare, told AFP.
The emergency treatment unit of the district’s main hospital was off-limits to visitors and other patients, with medical authorities setting up a separate ward for the wounded Iranians.
“Most of them have minor injuries, but there were a few with fractures and burns,” a nurse at the hospital said, without giving her name.
An Iranian embassy official present at the hospital declined to comment.
The frigate issued a distress call at dawn on Wednesday but had completely sunk by the time a Sri Lankan rescue ship reached the area.
The attack was about an hour away from the main naval base in Galle.
The warship was returning after attending a military exercise in India’s eastern port of Visakhapatnam.
India’s Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar said he too had had a telephone conversation with his Iranian counterpart, but gave no details.
Sri Lanka has remained neutral and has repeatedly urged dialogue to resolve the conflict in the Middle East.
Iran is a key buyer of Sri Lankan tea, the country’s main export commodity.


Induction stoves fly off shelves in India as gas shortage fears spark panic buying

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Induction stoves fly off shelves in India as gas shortage fears spark panic buying

CHENNAI: Indian households are rushing ‌to buy electric induction stoves, draining stocks online and in stores, amid fears of a potential cooking gas shortage tied to the Middle East conflict.
India, the world’s second-largest ​importer of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), has invoked emergency powers to boost supplies for households even as availability tightens for commercial users including canteens, hostels and restaurants.
Meanwhile, consumers are buying electric cooking appliances as a precaution, with some households worried about refill delays and higher prices.
Checks by Reuters on Thursday showed several induction stove models were unavailable on Amazon, Walmart-backed Flipkart, Eternal’s Blinkit and Zepto, while some offline chains said fresh supplies were still days ‌away.
Induction stove ‌sales on Amazon India have jumped more ​than 30-fold, ‌while ⁠rice cookers ​and ⁠electric pressure cookers are up fourfold, a company spokesperson said.
Kitchen appliances maker TTK Prestige said demand for induction stoves had surged far beyond supply.
“There is a threefold surge (in demand),” CEO Venkatesh Vijayaraghavan told Reuters.
The company has raised its production capacity to 100 percent from about 70 percent before the start of the war, and increased staffing by roughly 15 percent. It also plans to raise prices ⁠of induction stoves in the June quarter to offset ‌any higher costs.
Induction stoves accounted for ‌about a tenth of TTK’s 25.30 billion rupees ($274.52 ​million) standalone revenue in 2024–25.
Online shopping ‌platforms also showed models from Butterfly , Havells India and Bajaj ‌Electricals marked as “currently unavailable.”
Google Trends showed search interest for induction stoves hit a record high on March 12, while some restaurant chains, including Wow Momo and California Burrito, said they were exploring induction stoves as a contingency plan.
Anand Rathi analyst Manish Valecha ‌said large kitchen appliance makers with domestic assembly and strong distribution, including TTK Prestige, Butterfly and Stove Kraft, ⁠are best placed to ⁠benefit from the surge in induction cooktop demand. But reliance on imported components could pose supply risks if the spike persists, he added.
TTK Prestige will switch from sea shipments to airlifting components sourced from China and Southeast Asia, absorbing higher costs to ensure supplies if disruptions persist, Vijayaraghavan said.
The Middle East conflict has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf, raising costs and tightening oil and gas supplies from the Middle East.
On Thursday, the Suezmax tanker Shenlong reached Mumbai with Saudi crude, becoming the first crude carrier to arrive in India from the Middle ​East since the war between ​Iran and the United States and Israel erupted in late February, LSEG data showed.