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Iranian Crew Members Return Home From Sri Lanka

COLOMBO, April 15 (Reuters) – Over 200 ⁠Iranian ⁠crew members from two ⁠warships who were rescued by Sri ​Lanka have been sent back to their homeland, a top ‌official said on Wednesday.

Sri ‌Lanka rescued 32 Iranian crew from the warship ⁠IRIS ⁠Dena on March 4 after it was hit by ​a torpedo from a U.S. submarine.

The ship was returning from a naval exercise organised by India, amid the U.S.-Israeli ​war on Iran.

Sri Lanka also rescued 208 crew from ⁠a ⁠second vessel, IRIS Booshehr ⁠on ​March 5 that had also requested assistance from Colombo after ​it ran into ⁠engine trouble.

“The crew of both ships were flown out about 11 p.m. on a special flight on Tuesday night,” Deputy Defence Minister Aruna Jayasekera told ⁠Reuters.

After its crew was offloaded in Colombo, IRIS Booshehr was ⁠towed to waters off Sri Lanka’s eastern coast of Trincomalee eventually reaching on Tuesday morning.

“There are about 8-10 Iranian crew remaining aboard to assist operations,” Jayasekera added.

Sri Lanka granted 30-day entry visas to the crew members and housed them in navy and air force camps before arrangements were ⁠made for their return to Iran.

A chartered plane arranged by Iran took back the bodies of 84 crew members from the Dena who were ​killed in the U.S. attack.

(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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