The remains of chief engineer Patnala Suresh, 44, reached Visakhapatnam on Friday 19 June, completing the repatriation of all three Indian crew killed when US munitions struck the tanker MT Settebello on 10 June 1. Deck cadet Aditya Sharma and engine fitter Shivanand Chaurasiya had come home on 17 June; 21 of the ship's 24 crew survived the strike 2.
India's Ministry of External Affairs summoned the US Chargé d'Affaires Jason Meeks twice in a week 3, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi had raised the deaths with Trump directly at the G7 . Washington answered that blockade violations "will not be tolerated", offering no apology, opening no investigation, and signing no instrument of any kind. Delhi had repatriated the first two sailors only days earlier , and the original strike had already drawn a formal protest.
India was the largest non-belligerent economic casualty of the blockade, dependent on Hormuz for the bulk of its crude and liquefied petroleum gas. Its restraint, two summons and a G7 raise rather than a rupture, reflects strategic dependence on Washington and the constraints of the Quad partnership, not satisfaction. The blockade that killed the three men has now been lifted, and the deal that ended the enforcement made no provision for the civilians it killed.
