https://arab.news/6ye6c
- Incident in the Gulf of Aden came after the Houthis claimed on Tuesday night to have attacked the “Israeli” MSC Sarah ship in the Arabian Sea
- Houthis have increased assaults on ships in international seas off Yemen, the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean, issuing almost daily announcements claiming fresh strikes
AL-MUKALLA: A missile apparently launched by Yemen’s Houthi militia landed near a ship south of Yemen’s southern port city of Aden on Wednesday, hours after the Houthis claimed to be deploying a new long-range missile in their anti-ship campaign.
The UK Maritime Trade Operations said it received an alarm from a ship’s master regarding a missile impacting waters near the vessel, 52 miles south of Aden, adding that the ship and its crew were safe.
“The vessel is proceeding to its next port of call,” the UKMTO said in its alert, advising ships navigating the Gulf of Aden to take vigilance and notify the authority of any suspicious activities.
The incident in the Gulf of Aden came after the Houthis claimed on Tuesday night to have attacked the “Israeli” MSC Sarah ship in the Arabian Sea using a newly deployed long-range missile.
The MSC Sarah is a Liberian-flagged container ship heading from Panama to the UAE and was seen in the Gulf of Oman on Wednesday morning, according to ship monitoring website marinetraffic.com.
“The Yemeni Armed Forces maintained that this qualitative operation was carried out with a new ballistic missile that went into service after the successful conclusion of testing operations. The missile is distinguished by its ability to attack targets precisely and across vast distances,” Houthi military spokesman Yahya Sarea said in a televised statement.
The Houthis were referring to an incident reported by the UKMTO on Monday, in which the master of a ship reported a nearby explosion 246 nautical miles southeast of Nishtun, a coastal town in the government-controlled Yemeni province of Mahra.
This month, the Houthis have increased assaults on ships in international seas off Yemen, the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean, issuing almost daily announcements claiming fresh strikes, as opposed to the weekly claims of the past.
The US Central Command and the UK maritime agencies provide comparable daily statements regarding Houthi attacks on ships using drones, ballistic missiles and explosive-laden drone boats, as well as the shooting down of such weapons before they reach their intended targets.
The Houthis maintain that their actions are purely aimed at Israeli-linked ships and those traveling to Israeli ports to put pressure on Israel to end its war in the Palestinian Gaza Strip.
Separately, the Yemeni government has accused the Houthis of holding four Yemenia Airways planes in Sanaa, preventing hundreds of Yemeni pilgrims from returning home.
In a post on X, Yemeni Minister of Endowments and Guidance Mohammed Shabebah said that the Houthis had prevented four Yemenia aircraft from departing Sanaa airport for Jeddah to bring back Yemeni pilgrims, and that he has requested pilgrims to wait in their Makkah hotels until the planes are released.
“The Houthis are holding four aircraft at Sanaa International Airport, preventing them from returning to Jeddah Airport to take pilgrims to Sanaa,” the minister said. Yemenia said a few days ago that the Houthis are holding one of its planes at Sanaa airport and preventing maintenance, as well as refusing to allow the airline to access the more than $100 million in bank accounts held by the Houthis in Sanaa.
At the same time, Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday that the Houthis have abducted and forcibly disappeared over 60 Yemeni staffers from UN agencies, international missions and organizations since May 31, denying them access to lawyers, contacting their families or receiving life-saving drugs.
Citing relatives and experts, the international rights group asserted that the most recent Houthi crackdown is intended to divert attention from the militia’s failure to provide basic services, exert pressure on the central bank in Aden to revoke sanctions on Sanaa-based banks, and seize complete control over critical financial streams from the health, education and corporate sectors, as well as humanitarian aid agencies.
“The Houthis should immediately release all of these people, many of whom have spent their careers working to improve their country,” Niku Jafarnia, Yemen and Bahrain researcher at Human Rights Watch said in a statement, urging the international community to intervene and exert pressure on the Houthis to secure the release of the abducted Yemenis.
“The international community should be doing everything in their power to ensure that these people are immediately released.”