Ships are raising signals to show their link with China
in an effort to avoid a Houthi attack as they venture through the Red Sea.
In the midst of the rise in Houthi attacks on cargo ships
across the Red Sea, many vessels are now using their signals to indicate that
they have links to China in an effort to avoid a hijack attempt by the
Iran-backed rebel group.
Being the latest unusual measure taken to try and avoid
attack by Houthi militants in the Red Sea, at lease five ships venturing
through the Red Sea “all Chinese crew†or something similar in a field that
would normally contain its destination.
While two of the ships signaling 'Chinese
crew' are currently in the Red Sea, two more have navigated the risky waterway
and are now sailing to Asia. A fifth appears to be heading toward the Gulf of
Aden.
While Houthis
maintain that they are only targeting merchant ships with an Israel link,
several vessels with no discernable Israeli link or crew members have been
under attack. The result of these attacks is being witnessed through the
decrease in global exports and surge in oil prices in the West.
Suez Canal transits have plunged, falling
to the lowest level since the waterway was blocked by a giant container ship in
2021, as many ships
choose to avoid the Red Sea and instead sail thousands of miles around Africa
to deliver their goods.
After the
rapid surge in Houthi attacks across the Red Sea, the United States and United
Kingdom launched a joint airstrike against Houthi rebel targets in Yemen.