India Ports Global (IPGL), the Indian state-owned port operator, is executing a stake transfer of its holding in India Ports Global Chabahar Free Zone (IPGCFZ) to an Iranian entity ahead of the Chabahar sanctions waiver lapsing at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April 1. The transfer carries a contractual provision to return control to India once US sanctions ease. India has invested approximately $120 million in Chabahar under the 2024 ten-year operational agreement with Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation. India's Ministry of External Affairs has confirmed engagement with Washington on a possible waiver renewal; no OFAC instrument has appeared in the Federal Register pipeline.
This is the first concrete instance in the 2026 war of a third-country state-owned entity withdrawing operationally from Iran under US sanctions pressure. Delhi denies the "exit" framing; the operational reality is that the port comes under Iranian control on Sunday morning with a clause to revert. The transfer also breaks the eight-day MEA silence on the 15 April OFAC designations of the Shamkhani network, which named Indian nationals and India-registered firms . Delhi's preferred answer to the Shamkhani question turns out to be operational withdrawal rather than public statement.
The reversion clause is legally novel inside the 2026 sanctions context: it creates a contractual obligation to India inside an Iranian-controlled entity that is itself subject to US secondary sanctions. Any future activation would require an OFAC general license, so Delhi has pre-negotiated re-entry into a sanctions problem rather than exited one. The waiver expiry surfaced in the prior briefing ; the IPGL transfer is the operational consequence. India keeps the contract. Iran gets the keys.
