
© AFP/Karim Sahib
An Emirati man stands at the oil terminal of Fujairah.
The United Arab Emirates has said that
four commercial ships were hit by "sabotage" in its waters, hours after denying reports of explosions at an oil tanker terminal. The incident comes as US/Iran tension ratchets up.
The four vessels were targeted by "sabotage operations" in waters near the emirate of Fujairah, the country's foreign ministry said on Sunday.
The exact nature of the sabotage was not revealed, nor were the nationalities of the ships. There were no reported casualties.
"Subjecting commercial vessels to sabotage operations and threatening the lives of their crew is considered a dangerous development," the foreign ministry said in a statement, adding that it is investigating the alleged incident.

© GlobalSecurity.org
The statement came hours after
Fujairah's government denied reports that an explosion had rocked an oil terminal at the emirate's port. Lebanese broadcaster Mayadeen first reported the explosion, before the story was picked up by Iran's Press TV. Officials in Fujairah called on the media to "investigate accurately and rely on official sources."
Although the exact events are unknown, Iranian lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh
tweeted that
"the explosions of Fujairah showed that the security of the south of the Persian Gulf is like glass."
Should the security situation in the region deteriorate, much is at stake. Fujairah backs on to the Gulf of Oman on the south side of the Strait of Hormuz. With the UAE and Saudi Arabia on one side and Iran on the other,
one-third of the world's oil at sea transits the strait, which is only 39 kilometers wide.
Comment: Mr Williamson is correct in labeling any negotiations regarding Brexit as 'fruitless'. It was never the intention of Britain's Deep State to leave the European Union. Conservative posturing and Labour bluster is all a show.