Senegal Tanker Blast Puts Spotlight on Turkish Operator’s Ties to Russia’s Dark Fleet

What Happened?

On the night of November 27–28, the Panama-flagged oil tanker M/T Mersin — operated by Turkish firm Besiktas Shipping — was hit by four external explosions while anchored off the coast of Dakar, Senegal.

Water Droplet

The blasts caused seawater to flood the ship’s engine room. The crew was evacuated safely, and there were no reported casualties or oil pollution.

Water Droplet

Why It Matters?

Some of Besiktas-operated vessels were sanctioned by Ukraine for involvement in sanctioned fuel transfers. This raises questions if Mersin’s recent voyage was part of broader efforts to move sanctioned Russian oil — linking corporate ownership and fleet management to contested, high-risk oil trade.

Water Droplet

With previous tanker attacks concentrated in the Black Sea region, the incident off Senegal suggests that risk for such “dark-fleet” tankers may now extend to far-flung Atlantic/West-African waters — expanding the geographical scope of danger to shipping, environment, and inspection oversight.

Water Droplet