UN renews calls for access to Safer as fighting rages in Hodeidah

The UN has renewed calls for Iran-backed Houthis to
allow its experts to visit the decaying Safer tanker in the Red Sea.
Stephane Dujarric, a spokesman for UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said on Monday the UN was still worried
about the tanker, warning any oil spill would cause a major environmental
disaster.
“I can tell you that we remain extremely concerned
about the oil tanker off the coast of Hodeidah, which is at risk of spilling
more than 1.1 million barrels of oil into the Red Sea,” he said at a press
conference in New York, adding the UN has sent the Houthis a detailed plan
about proposed technical assessment of the tanker.
“The UN has submitted a comprehensive mission
proposal to the de facto authorities, and we are optimistic that this will be
quickly approved,” he said, adding: “The UN needs formal approval of the
mission in order to begin procuring specialized equipment and making other
arrangements.”
Last week, a virtual meeting between the Houthis and
UN officials ended in failure. Houthi officials said they blocked the
maintenance of the tanker under UN supervision over fears members of the
proposed team were “spies” disguised as engineers.
Dujarric demanded the Houthis swiftly comply with
the UN demands for inspection, saying the UN team would not arrive at the site
until at least two months after receiving Houthi consent. “Based on current
market availability of required equipment, we would need up to seven weeks from
receipt of approvals until the mission staff could arrive on site with
necessary equipment. The sooner the approvals come together, the sooner the
work can get started,” Dujarric said.
In Hodeidah province, fighting intensified on
Tuesday for the fifth day as the Houthis launched major assaults on
government-controlled areas. Heavy explosions rocked the edges of Hodeidah city
on Tuesday, as government forces traded heavy fire with the Houthis.
“The Houthis launched an attack on Tuesday morning
on the Joint Forces in Kilo 16 and Al-Sateen street in Hodeidah,” a local
military officer, who preferred to remain anonymous, told Arab News by
telephone.
Other local sources described the clashes in
Hodeidah this week as the heaviest since late 2018 when the internationally
recognized government and the rebels signed the Stockholm Agreement. Fighting
has been raging in Hays and Al-Durihimi districts in Hodeidah since Friday,
when the Houthis launched an offensive to push out government troops from
liberated areas in the provinces.
Hundreds of Houthis and government troops have been
reportedly killed or wounded in the fighting. International experts have warned
that stray shells could hit the stranded Safer, causing an explosion as
destructive as the recent port blast in Beirut.