The remains of two of the three Indian sailors killed aboard the tanker MT Settebello were repatriated on 18 June, the Indian embassy in Oman confirmed 1. The three men, Aditya Sharma, Shivanand Chaurasiya and Patnala Suresh, died when US forces struck the vessel's engine room on 11 June . They are the first non-belligerent nationals killed by US military fire in the conflict.
India is the largest non-belligerent economic casualty of the Hormuz blockade, a Quad partner Washington needs against China, and now the one neutral state owed blood. Delhi's response has been procedural rather than rhetorical. It has lodged two formal protests and summoned the US deputy chief of mission over the strike , keeping the deaths in the diplomatic record as an unanswered demand rather than a closed condolence.
At the G7 in Kananaskis the day before, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told the leaders, Trump seated beside him, that "seafarers must work without fear," and tied the killings to the instability in the strait . No US apology has followed, and no investigation instrument has been established. The repatriation closes a logistical loop without closing the diplomatic one: the deal that was meant to reopen India's sea lane has not, and its dead came home first.
