Greek-owned crude oil tanker Delta Blue has reported four attacks off Yemen’s port of Mokha during the last 24 hours, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations agency said on Friday, and the vessel’s manager said the ship and its crew were safe.
On Thursday, the captain of the Delta Blue tanker reported that two small craft had approached and fired a rocket-propelled grenade which exploded near the Liberia-flagged vessel some 45 nautical miles south of Mokha.
Each of the two small boats had four people on board, the UKMTO agency said. Hours later, another missile exploded close to the tanker.
On Friday, the UKMTO said the vessel had reported another attack by an uncrewed surface vessel and one by a missile that landed near the ship.
Asked about the incidents, Athens-based Delta Tankers told Reuters the crew and vessel were safe.
“The vessel is continuing on its onward journey,” the Delta Blue’s manager added.
The attacks have drawn U.S. and British retaliatory strikes and disrupted global trade as ship owners reroute vessels away from the Red Sea and Suez Canal to sail the longer route around the southern tip of Africa.
U.S. military forces struck at targets in Houthi-controlled Yemen on Wednesday, destroying two drones, a Houthi ground control station, and three anti-ship cruise missiles, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said.
Earlier, the Houthi movement said it had attacked another Greek-owned container ship in the Red Sea and two U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Aden. The attacks were not confirmed by CENTCOM or the vessel’s manager, which said the ship and its crew were safe.
[Reuters]