Russia withdraws military equipment from Syria’s support port, shows pictures
The signal of the ship’s plane was taken in a short way by Marinetrafic on Tuesday morning, showing that it went to the West via the Mediterranean near the coast of Cyprus. However, since then, no signal was taken because the audience was turned off.
On Wednesday, the satellite showed another ship – the experts had also been determined by experts – also left the port. The images also have a large number of containers parked nearby.
The Sparta’s plane was not discovered if a signal was not detected in the audience – this was offered it turned off.
The International Maritime Organization (IMO) requires all ships with more than 300 tons, other than some limited conditions.
Ships can choose to turn off the marking signal for legal reasons – for example, while riding high-risk piracy zones. However, according to NATO, it can also offer that the ship is working to “hide illegal activities.”
Marine Specialist Frederik Van Lokeren, the former Belgian Donanyan lieutenant and analyst, leaving the port based on satellite pictures, said the ship is “highly confident.”
BBC inspection has previously supervised Sparta and the area where the dockedin is now empty.