Yemen’s FM blames Houthis for looming Safer oil tanker disaster
Yemen’s Foreign Minister Mohammed Al-Hadhrami
blamed the Houthi militia for the Safer oil tanker’s looming disaster as the
militia continued to block the United Nation’s help to access the damage.
Al-Hadhrami stressed the importance of
pressuring the Houthis to allow technicians from the international organization
to access the tanker during a meeting with senior British diplomats on
Thursday, state news agency Saba New reported.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia warned the UN Security
Council that an “oil spot” has been sighted in a shipping lane 50 km west of
abandoned and decaying Safer oil tanker off the coast of Yemen. Experts fear it
could spill 1.1 million barrels of crude into the Red Sea.
The tanker has been moored near Ras Issa oil
terminal for more than five years. The UN previously warned that it could leak
four times as much oil as was spilled during the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster off
the coast of Alaska. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and the Security
Council have repeatedly called on Houthi insurgents in Yemen to grant access
the tanker for a technical assessment and emergency repairs.
UN humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock said last
week that a new UN proposal to assess and carry out initial repairs on the
Safer oil tanker was being discussed with the Houthis. “We hope the new
proposal will be quickly approved so the work can start,” he said.
Meanwhile President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi on
Thursday urged Houthis to stop impeding the flow of urgently needed
humanitarian aid following a warning from the UN humanitarian chief last week
that “the specter of famine” has returned to the conflict-torn country.
His plea came in a pre-recorded speech to the
UN General Assembly’s ministerial meeting being held virtually because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
“We are trying to save our country and
establish a just and lasting peace,” Hadi said, blaming Iran for meddling in
his nation.
“The objective is to stop the bloodletting in
Yemen,” he said.
Lowcock told the UN Security Council last week
that famine in Yemen, the Arab world’s poorest country, was averted two years
ago because donors swiftly met 90 percent of the UN’s funding requirements. But
the UN’s latest figures show that the current $3.4 billion appeal is less than
38 percent funded.



