Home Top News An oil tanker caught fire in the Gulf of Aden following a Houthi missile attack

An oil tanker caught fire in the Gulf of Aden following a Houthi missile attack

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An oil tanker caught fire in the Gulf of Aden following a Houthi missile attack

Mohammed Hammoud/Getty Images

Yemenis launch a fake missile in protest against US airstrikes on Yemen.



CNN

An oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden catches fire after a missile attack by Yemen's Houthi militias, the latest incident linked to an Iran-backed group along the main shipping lane.

Marlene Luanda, operator of the British oil tanker, said on Friday that “the vessel was hit by a missile in the Gulf of Aden after crossing the Red Sea” and that “firefighting equipment on board was used to suppress and control the fire on board. A cargo tank on the starboard side.”

Iran-backed militants have claimed responsibility for the attack Report “They fired on the tanker in response to US-British aggression against our country.” [Yemen]” and in support of the Palestinian people.

Cargo group Trafigura, which operates the ship and has offices in Britain, said it was monitoring the situation and that military ships in the region were on their way to “provide assistance”.

The British government has yet to comment on the attack.

US Central Command said the ship had made a distress call and suffered damage after fighters fired an anti-ship missile from Yemen's Houthi-controlled area.

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The USS Carney, a guided-missile destroyer, and other coalition ships responded “and are providing assistance,” Central Command said.

It added that there are no injuries at this time.

NASA's Fire Information for Resource Management System (FIRMS) on Friday detected Marlin Luanda burning in the middle of the Gulf of Aden near its last known location.

According to US Central Command, the USS Carney shot down a Houthi anti-ship ballistic missile that targeted a US warship early this morning. No injuries resulted from the attack on the USS Carney.

America and England are attacking Houthis target in Yemen After the Biden administration and its allies warned that the group would bear the consequences of its attacks on international shipping lanes.

The Houthis have said they will not stop their offensive until the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza ends. In his speech, Houthi leader Abdul Malek al-Houthi said, “It is a great honor and blessing to face the United States directly.”

The attacks have forced some of the world's largest shipping and oil companies to halt traffic through the world's one. The most important sea trade routes. Tankers are instead adding thousands of miles to international shipping lanes by sailing around the African continent instead of going through the Suez Canal.

CNN reported earlier U.S. intelligence officials believe that Iran is carefully calibrating its response to Israel's war in Gaza, allowing and encouraging its proxy groups to make precise expenditures against Israeli and U.S. interests — and halting actions that would provoke direct conflict with Iran. .

Within Yemen, a period of one year conflict between Houthi forces and the Saudi-backed coalition have plunged the population into a devastating humanitarian crisis marked by hunger, economic turmoil and extreme poverty.

Houthi forces attacked the capital Sanaa in 2014, toppling the internationally recognized and Saudi-backed government and sparking a civil war. The conflict turned into a wider war in 2015 when a Saudi-led coalition intervened to try to defeat the Houthis.

The conflict claimed up to 377,000 lives, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) reported in 2021. More than half of them died from indirect causes related to the conflict, such as lack of food, water and sanitation.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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