Three dead, many crew missing as Houthis sink Red Sea cargo ship
The Houthis released footage of missiles being launched at the ship, with drone imagery showing its bridge appearing heavily damaged and oil leaking from the hull.
Loading
The bulk carrier took on water from holes along its waterline before sinking, as the rebels chanted: 'God is the greatest, death to America, death to Israel, curse the Jews, victory to Islam.'
The attack is one of the deadliest carried out by the militant group since it began targeting commercial vessels in the Red Sea in 2023 over Israel's war on Iran-backed Hamas in Gaza.
On Sunday, the Houthis used missiles, rocket-propelled grenades and gunfire to target the Magic Seas, another Greek-owned, Liberian-flagged vessel, the UKMTO said.
The Houthis released another dramatic video of that attack, showing masked gunmen storming the ship before sinking it with explosive charges.
Twenty-two people on board were rescued, the United Arab Emirates said.
The Red Sea is a crucial maritime trade route where $US1 trillion in cargo once passed through annually. From November 2023 to December 2024, the Houthis targeted more than 100 ships with missiles and drones in a campaign the rebels describe as supporting Palestinians in the Gaza Strip during the Israel-Hamas war.
The Iranian-backed rebels stopped their attacks during a brief ceasefire in the war. They later became the target of several weeks of bombing ordered by US President Donald Trump.
But the attacks on the Eternity C and the Magic Seas raise new questions about the Red Sea's safety, as ships had slowly begun returning to its waters.
Meanwhile, a new possible ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war – as well as the future of talks between the US and Iran over Tehran's battered nuclear program – remain in the balance.
'Grave concern'
'We are now with grave concern seeing an escalation in the Red Sea with attacks on two commercial ships resulting in civilian loss of life and casualties as well as the potential for environmental damage,' warned UN special envoy Hans Grundberg.
The Eternity C, flagged out of Liberia but owned by a Greek firm, was probably targeted like the Magic Seas over its owners doing business with Israel. Neither vessel apparently requested an escort from the EU force.
Washington has two aircraft carriers in the Middle East, the USS Nimitz and the USS Carl Vinson, but both are probably in the Arabian Sea, far from the site of the attacks.
There are two American destroyers believed to be operating in the Red Sea. However, the ships attacked had no US ties, and a ceasefire between the Houthis and America announced after the bombing campaign this year still appears to be holding.
Houthi military spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Saree claimed responsibility for the attack in a prerecorded message on Wednesday as the EU force acknowledged it was still searching for those onboard.
In the Philippines, migrant workers secretary Hans Cacdac said he had been leading an effort to reach out to the missing sailors' families to update them on the search and rescue efforts.
'It's human nature that one should be terribly worried and distraught about the situation,' Cacdac told the Associated Press by telephone.
Grundberg, the UN envoy, also condemned the targeting of civilian infrastructure after Israel bombed three Houthi-controlled ports in Yemen over the weekend and hit a power station.
'Yemen must not be drawn deeper into regional crises that threaten to unravel the already extremely fragile situation in the country,' he warned during an address to the Security Council.
Last week, following the interception of a Houthi missile fired at Israel, US ambassador Mike Huckabee posted on X that 'Maybe those B2 bombers need to visit Yemen!'
Yemen's war began when the Houthis seized Sanaa in 2014. A Saudi-led coalition backing Yemen's exiled government considered trying to retake the port of Hodeida by force in 2018, but ultimately decided against it as international criticism and worries about it being destroyed grew.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
33 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Gaza ceasefire talks held up by Israel withdrawal plans: Palestinian sources
Indirect talks between Hamas and Israel for a ceasefire in Gaza are being held up by Israel's proposals to keep troops in the territory, two Palestinian sources with knowledge of the discussions told AFP on Saturday. Delegations from both sides began discussions in Qatar last Sunday to try to agree on a temporary halt to the 21-month conflict sparked by Hamas's deadly attack on Israel on October 7, 2023. Both Hamas and Israel have said that 10 living hostages who were taken that day and are still in captivity would be released if an agreement for a 60-day ceasefire were reached. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that he hoped to clinch a deal "in a few days", which could then lead to talks for a more permanent end to hostilities. But one Palestinian source, speaking anonymously due to the sensitivity of the talks, said Israel's refusal to accept Hamas's demand to withdraw all of its troops from Gaza was holding back progress. Another said mediators had asked both sides to postpone the talks until the arrival of US President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, in Doha. "The negotiations in Doha are facing a setback and complex difficulties due to Israel's insistence, as of Friday, on presenting a map of withdrawal, which is actually a map of redeployment and repositioning of the Israeli army rather than a genuine withdrawal," one Palestinian source said. The source said Israel was proposing to maintain military forces in more than 40 percent of the Palestinian territory, forcing hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians into a small area near the city of Rafah, on the border with Egypt, they added. "Hamas's delegation will not accept the Israeli maps... as they essentially legitimise the reoccupation of approximately half of the Gaza Strip and turn Gaza into isolated zones with no crossings or freedom of movement," the source said. A second Palestinian source accused the Israeli delegation of having no authority, and "stalling and obstructing the agreement in order to continue the war of extermination". - Latest strikes - The Gaza war began after Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, resulting in the deaths of at least 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures. Of the 251 hostages seized, 49 are still being held, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. At least 57,823 Palestinians, also mostly civilians, have been killed since the start of the war, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza. Gaza's civil defence agency said at least 14 Palestinians were killed in the latest wave of Israeli strikes across the territory on Saturday. More than 30 people were killed on Friday, including 10 people who were waiting for aid handouts, the agency said. The Israeli military on Saturday said it had attacked "approximately 250 terrorist targets throughout the Gaza Strip" in the last 48 hours. Targets included "terrorists, booby-trapped structures, weapons storage facilities, anti-tank missile launch posts, sniper posts, tunnels and additional terrorist infrastructure sites", it added. Two previous ceasefires -- a week-long truce beginning in late November 2023 and a two-month one from mid-January this year -- led to the release of 105 hostages in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners. The second Palestinian source said "some progress" had been made in the latest talks on plans for releasing Palestinian prisoners held by Israel and getting more aid to Gaza. Netanyahu, who is under domestic and international pressure to end the war, said this week that neutralising Hamas as a security threat was a prerequisite for any long-term ceasefire talks. That included the group giving up weapons, he said, warning that failure to do so would mean Israel would have to do so by force. bur-az/phz/dcp

Herald Sun
an hour ago
- Herald Sun
Peta Credlin: How Albo should have responded to anti-Semitic report
Don't miss out on the headlines from News. Followed categories will be added to My News. The Prime Minister would be a lot more credible on the anti-Semitism he deplored last week if there'd been some specific actions the government was about to take, rather than just welcoming yet another report with official hand-wringing. Almost all of the recommendations in the report from his own anti-Semitism special envoy Jillian Segal can be acted upon now, including the deportation of people spreading hate. And yet for months and months, the bile being spread in some mosques goes unchallenged while, overseas, we've seen examples of zero-tolerance in the case of Italy, which expelled a pro-Hamas imam despite him being a resident in Bologna for 30 years. When a synagogue is firebombed with worshippers inside, and when a mob ransacks a Jewish restaurant with the police on hand making just three arrests, our country doesn't just have a Jew hatred problem but a general challenge to the rule of law from people who think they can intimidate others with impunity. There's now a tactical partnership between recent migrants who haven't left behind the hatreds of their homeland and cultural Marxists who want to turn Australia upside down. Jews are the initial target, but the real enemy is western civilisation itself. Without strong action, it soon won't just be one community that's targeted but every law-abiding Australian and history is our lesson here; look at Europe in the 1930s and look at what's happening again in Europe today. This is why the Prime Minister's response to the report released last Thursday was so underwhelming, because we still have time to turn this around, but it's as though he's only half-interested. I was staggered to hear Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan admit at her press conference on Monday that, despite a weekend of racial violence, she had not spoken with Albanese. Can you imagine John Howard or even Kevin Rudd being asleep at the wheel like this, treating the prime ministership as a part-time gig? Take the example of defunding institutions that react inadequately to anti-Semitic eruptions and removing their charitable status. If the government is as serious about these recommendations as it claimed to be last week, the PM should have been at the press conference with a list of universities and arts bodies that he was defunding immediately, and yet all we got were just more words. On so many issues, it's hard to avoid the conclusion that the Prime Minister is a modern version of Nero, fiddling while Rome burns. He's about to embark on a leisurely six-day tour of communist China, that will include his fourth meeting with President Xi Jinping; while eight months after Donald Trump's re-election, Anthony Albanese has still not had six minutes with the leader of the free world. While in Beijing, our PM will doubtless join the communist dictator in espousing the merits of free trade – that will be an obvious slap at Trump – while saying nothing about Xi's boycott of $20 billion of our trade in response to Australia's call for an inquiry into the Wuhan virus. Then there's the PM's obstinate refusal to increase defence spending even though our armed forces are obviously being hollowed out and Australia is gaining a reputation as a weak ally that expects to freeload on others as NATO countries take the global threats seriously and scale up. And given he's been a hard-left antinuclear activist for much of his life, I am fast coming to the view that Albanese wants Trump to walk away from AUKUS because nuclear power at sea (in our subs) makes his opposition to nuclear power on land increasingly unsustainable. Even on childcare, the subject of understandable public alarm after the revelation 10 days back that a worker employed at some 20 centres was on charges including the rape of children aged between eight months and two years, with 1200 infants now being tested for STIs, it turns out that the Albanese government's training manual for childcare workers prioritises 'cultural safety' (including sexual orientation) over the safety of children. And despite ending last week with yet another male childcare worker charged over sex crimes at a NSW centre, we still have not seen any action to better protect our most vulnerable. All this is quite apart from the fact that we've had two years of declining GDP per person and an 8 per cent fall in living standards exacerbated by the government's pro-union workplace changes and climate policy obsessions that are sending business bankrupt or offshore. Our country is drifting backwards fast under a Prime Minister who seems to think that his election victory was a personal endorsement rather than just the rejection of an Opposition that plainly wasn't ready for government. THUMBS UP No 'trans-men' in women's prisons – for now. But unless new self-ID laws in NSW (and Vic) change, this will happen. THUMBS DOWN Smelter bailouts – government is about to spend billions bailing out smelters due to government policies. How about we just fix the policies and spare taxpayers? Watch Peta on Credlin on Sky News, weeknights at 6pm Originally published as Peta Credlin: How Albo should have responded to anti-Semitic report


SBS Australia
an hour ago
- SBS Australia
Trump suggests reporter is 'very evil' for asking about Texas flood warning system
United States President Donald Trump has lashed out at a reporter during a tour of a flash flooding site in central Texas, suggesting she was a "very evil person" for asking a question about whether the area's warning alert system worked as well as it could have. His response is unlikely to dampen mounting concerns about official preparations, which have refused to go away after the flash floods killed at least 120 people and left another 170 missing. As he surveyed the damage from the deadly Fourth of July weekend floods in Texas that have killed at least 120 people, Trump appeared temporarily lost for words. "We just were making a little tour of the area. It's hard to believe the devastation. Trees that are 100 years old just ripped out of the ground. I've never seen anything like it," he said. However, he soon recovered his composure. 'Only a bad person would ask a question like that' Trump has previously been fond of decrying officials in Democrat-run states hit by past natural disasters and tragedy. However, during his visit to the Texas flood plain in America's most populous Republican state, the president struck a far more sombre and sympathetic tone — highlighting the heartbreak of what happened while effusively praising elected officials and first responders. When a reporter asked him about whether the warning alert system for the devastating floods worked as well as it could have, Mr Trump lashed out. "Only a bad person would ask a question like that. I don't know who you are, but only a very evil person would ask you a question that." Texas Republican Representative Chip Roy was on the tour with the president and backed his criticism of the reporter. "The governor said it best when he said that pointing fingers is for losers," he said. "This state is about looking forward and we'll figure out how to make our systems the best they can be. But importantly, when you see 26 feet of water rising a foot per minute, don't go around pointing fingers." That's something some locals, like nurse Aliz Treibs, agree with. "I know that everybody is trying to find fault and blame right now and try to make it about politics. But I just feel like this really has been just a horrible, horrible act of nature and nobody could have controlled this either way." But others, like the pastor at Christ is King church, Michael Bell, says there are people who should be held responsible for what happened, even if it's unclear who they might be. "I know there was something similar to this in 1987 that took some lives — not as extreme as this," he said. "But I know after that there were some discussions of some grander scale plans that could have been implemented to avoid catastrophe as regards to human life, you know? "So, there will be some accountability that has to happen. Some changes need to be made for sure." Concerns over official handling of flood Concerns about the official preparation for and response to the disaster have started at the top. Some have asked if those federal government cuts could have weakened the flood preparations or response. Dr Rick Spinrad — the former administrator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which oversees the National Weather Service — has told CNN that it's impossible to say right now. "A lot of the weather forecast offices now are not operating at full complement of staff, which means that you're really putting an extra burden on these folks. I don't know how much that was a factor in what happened in Texas," he said. But it's at the state and local level where most of the questions are being asked. Camp Mystic's disaster plan was approved by Texas officials just two days before the floods swept away an estimated 27 campers and staff members. The Department of State Health Services released records earlier this week showing the camp complied with a host of state regulations around procedures to be implemented in the case of a disaster. It remains unclear what was in the plan and whether or not it was implemented. Governor Gregg Abbott has scheduled a special session of the Texas Legislature, beginning on 21 July, which will discuss improving warning systems for weather events. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha says local officials will have their own review once they've completed the task of recovering those who perished in the floodwaters and cleaning up the area.