Russia tells France to free tanker captain it says was detained on false charges


MOSCOW, June 3 (Reuters) - Russia ⁠is demanding that France release the captain of ⁠a tanker detained in France on what it ‌says are false charges, the Russian embassy in Paris said on Wednesday.

France's navy said on Monday it had intercepted a sanctioned tanker, the ​Tagor, linked to the Russian oil trade ⁠in the Atlantic Ocean. ⁠Paris ordered it to head to the French mainland, in ⁠a ‌move Moscow said was illegal and amounted to "international piracy."

The Russian embassy said that French authorities had ⁠informed Moscow that the vessel's captain, a ​Russian national, had ‌been detained on what it described as "trumped-up" charges.

"The Embassy ⁠has once ​again contacted the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, demanding immediate consular access to the Russian citizen and his prompt release," ⁠the embassy said in a statement.

Russia ​has relied on old vessels, known in the West as the "shadow fleet", to ship its oil and gas in the ⁠face of Western sanctions.

France and Britain have vowed to obstruct such vessels as part of a European strategy to reduce Russia's ability to fund its war in Ukraine.

Russia rejects ​the "shadow fleet" label, says its oil ⁠shipments are legitimate, and has condemned Western attempts to intercept ​tankers as illegal and akin to ‌piracy, warning it reserves the ​right to take steps to protect its own shipping.

(Reporting by ReutersWriting by Maxim RodionovEditing by Andrew Osborn)

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