Shropshire Star

Rescuers search for missing crew after Red Sea attack

US officials have claimed that Yemeni rebels may have kidnapped the missing personnel.

By contributor Jon Gambrell, Associated Press
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Supporting image for story: Rescuers search for missing crew after Red Sea attack
The Liberian-flagged bulk carrier Eternity C was attacked (Sinisa Aljinovic via AP)

Rescuers have found four more crew members who went missing after Yemen’s Houthi rebels sank a ship in the Red Sea as the United States alleged the group may “have kidnapped” others on board.

The Houthis released dramatic footage of the sinking of the Liberian-flagged, Greek-owned Eternity C, which the rebels targeted with gunfire and explosive drones for hours, killing at least three crew members.

The attack on the Eternity C, as well as the sinking of the bulk carrier Magic Seas after another attack on Sunday, represents a new level of violence being employed by the Houthis after a month of holding their fire in a campaign they tie back to the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip.

Yemeni port damage
Israeli air strikes targeted the port in Hodeida, Yemen, on Tuesday (Planet Labs PBC via AP)

Meanwhile, a new possible ceasefire in that war – as well as the future of talks between the US and Iran over Tehran’s battered nuclear programme – remains in the balance.

The Houthis said they fired a missile at Israel on Thursday morning, which the Israeli military said it intercepted.

A statement from the European Union naval mission in the Red Sea said the crew of the Eternity C included 22 sailors, among them 21 Filipinos and one Russian, as well as a three-member security team.

Rescuers on Wednesday recovered five Filipinos and one Indian.

On Thursday, the EU force known as Operation Aspides said it found three more Filipinos, and a Greek national who was part of the ship’s security team, bringing the total number of those recovered alive to 10.

At least three people were also killed during the hours-long attack on the ship, the EU force previously said, and their nationalities were not immediately known.

That leaves a dozen unaccounted for.

In footage released by the Houthis, a rebel can be purportedly heard on a VHF radio transmission offering those on board the ability to flee the sinking vessel.

However, it was not clear if any more crew fled and what happened to them.

The Houthis said in a statement that their forces “responded to rescue a number of the ship’s crew, provide them with medical care and transport them to a safe location”.

The statement offered no details on the number of the crew, their condition or where they were.

In a post late on Wednesday on the X, the US embassy in Yemen – which has operated from Saudi Arabia for about a decade now – denounced the Houthis as having “kidnapped” the crew.

“After killing their shipmates, sinking their ship and hampering rescue efforts, the Houthi terrorists have kidnapped many surviving crew members of the Eternity C,” the embassy said.

“We call for their immediate and unconditional safe release.”

The Houthis have held mariners in the past.

After seizing a ship called the Galaxy Leader in November 2023, the rebels held the crew until January 2025.

In the Philippines, migrant workers secretary Hans Cacdac said he has been leading an effort to reach out to the families of the missing Filipino sailors to update them on the search and rescue efforts.

“It’s human nature that one should be terribly worried and distraught about the situation,” Mr Cacdac told The Associated Press by telephone.

“It’s our role in government to be there for them in their utmost hour of need to ensure that not just government services, but throughout this hand-holding process, we will provide the necessary support.”

The Eternity C, flagged out of Liberia but owned by a Greek firm, is likely to have been targeted like the Magic Seas over its firm doing business with Israel.

Neither vessel apparently requested an escort from the EU force.