World on brink of environmental catastrophe due to Houthi savagery

The terrorist Houthi militia in Yemen is using the oil tanker Safer, which is located in the port of Ras Issa in Hodeidah governorate in the Red Sea, as a means to extort the international community. Since March 2018, the arrival of a United Nations team at the request of the Yemeni government has been obstructed to maintain the dilapidated ship, which raises world fears of a great environmental disaster.
Satellite images recently showed an oil spill from the
floating Safer tanker, which carries about 1.1 million barrels of crude oil.
The Houthis have refused to maintain it for five years, and any oil spill from
it would lead to an environmental and economic disaster in Yemen and the
region.
For its part, the United Nations expressed its hope that its
experts would be able to travel to Yemen in early March 2021 to conduct a
preliminary examination and maintenance process for Safer, noting that the UN
mission, which was scheduled to start at the end of January 2021 and early
February 2021, was delayed due to procedural problems.
“We have faced some delays in international shipping beyond
our control, and there has also been a backlash in signing documents, and
[these problems] have now been solved,” UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric told
reporters.
“At the moment, we believe that we can go there [Yemen] by
the beginning of March on our part. We are doing our best to abide by this
timetable and start the mission,” he added.
“We have informed the authorities of our concerns about several logistical issues that are still pending. We urgently need to solve these problems in the coming days to avoid further delays,” Dujarric continued, stressing that adherence to the new schedule depends on the good will of the revolutionaries.
Militia obstructs
In the same context, the legitimate Yemeni government
revealed on Thursday, January 28, that the Houthi militia, which was recently
added to the US list of terrorist organizations, has retreated again from
allowing a UN team to access the oil tanker, amid escalating warnings of crude
leakage from it, which heralds the occurrence of a huge ecological disaster
globally.
Yemeni Minister of Information Muammar al-Eryani said in statements
reported by Al-Arabiya.net that the Iranian-backed Houthi militia is backing
away from an agreement it signed with the United Nations to allow a UN team to
board Safer and assess the technical situation of maintaining it or unloading
its cargo of more than a million barrels of oil.
Eryani confirmed in a series of tweets that the Houthis’
repeated retreat from their obligations confirms that the oil tanker is being
used to extort the international community and obtain political gains without
regard for the warnings of the catastrophic environmental, economic and
humanitarian risks resulting from the leak or if the tanker sank or exploded.
The Yemeni minister called on the international community and the UN Security Council to take a clear stance on evading the Houthi militia and to exert real pressure on the Houthis to prevent an imminent disaster, support the government's efforts, and meet popular demands to designate it a terrorist organization.
Frequent warnings
The legitimate Yemeni government has repeatedly warned that
time is running out due to the intransigence of the Houthi militia in dealing
with the disaster of the Safer oil tanker before it occurs.
It stressed that it is waiting for the international community
to put more pressure on the Houthis to allow the UN team to reach the ship and
to start solving the problem by starting to empty the reservoir of oil as soon
as possible, in anticipation of the occurrence of an environmental disaster in
the event of its collapse for any reason.
Earlier last year, the Houthi militia announced its approval
to allow the team to board the tanker in June 2020, before it backed away from
its obligations.
For years, the United Nations has been trying to secure this
ship and prevent a catastrophic oil leak, but it cannot do so due to the
refusal of the Houthis, who control the port of Hodeidah.
Safer, which was manufactured 45 years ago and is being used
as a floating storage platform, is loaded with about 1.1 million barrels of
crude oil, valued at about $40 million.
The ship has not undergone any maintenance since 2015, which
led to the erosion of its hull and the deterioration of its condition. On May
27, 2020, water leaked into the ship's engine room until it was threatened at
any moment with exploding or fission, which would lead to the leakage of its
cargo in the Red Sea waters.