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Maritime Authorities Crack Down on Sanctions Evasion and False Flags

By MGN EditorialFebruary 20, 2026 at 02:00 PM

International maritime authorities are taking action against vessels flying false flags and evading sanctions on Russia, with new enforcement measures in New Zealand and Denmark.

In a crackdown on sanctions evasion and fraudulent ship registrations, maritime authorities around the world are stepping up efforts to identify and detain vessels engaging in these practices. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) secretariat has counted 529 vessels flying false flags, a sprawling fraud problem that will be a key agenda item at next month's legal sub-committee meeting, according to a report from Splash247. This exposes systemic weaknesses in global ship registration that bad actors have exploited. New Zealand unveiled its largest sanctions package to date on Friday, targeting Russia-linked shipping. The measures include 23 individuals, 13 entities and 100 vessels, and lowered the oil price cap for Russian-origin crude to $44.10 per barrel. This comes as the European Union continues to tighten its sanctions regime against Russia following the invasion of Ukraine. Separately, Denmark's maritime authority on Thursday detained an Iran-flagged container vessel anchored in Danish waters after determining it was not properly registered. The ship, named Nora, was initially sailing under a Comoros flag, but Comoros had informed Denmark that the vessel's registration was invalid. These actions by maritime regulators demonstrate a growing global effort to crack down on sanctions evasion and fraudulent ship registrations, which undermine the integrity of international shipping. Industry experts say these systemic issues expose vulnerabilities that bad actors have exploited, and tackling them will require greater information sharing and coordination between flag states, port authorities and international organizations.

Source: Splash247

#sanctions#false flags#ship registration#maritime enforcement

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