Shipowners and charterers who are averse to taking calculated risks with
their ships, cargo and crew may have to divert even further to avoid Houthi
attacks. Yesterday (28 May)
came news that a Greek-owned bulker, the Laax, had survived
being struck by three Houthi missiles in the Red Sea while the U.S.-flagged
Maersk Hartford was one of two vessels targeted in the Arabian Sea.
U.S. Central Command
(CENTCOM), reports that, between 12:05 p.m. and 1:40 p.m. (Sanaa time) May 28,
Iranian-backed Houthis launched five anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBM) from
Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen into the Red Sea. M/V Laax, a
Marshall Island flagged, Greek owned and operated bulk carrier, reported being
struck by three of the missiles, but continued its voyage. There were no
injuries reported by U.S., coalition, or merchant vessels.
A UKMTO report
suggests that the Houthi attack on the Laax involved a second
attack on the ship.
Reporting on what
looks to have been a spate of Houthi attacks, Al Arabiya says that the Laax is one of six
ships that the Houthis claim to have targeted in three different seas. The
others that the Houthis claimed to have launched attacks against were two
Maltese-flagged bulkers, the Morea and Sealady in
the Red Sea, the Alba and the Maersk Hartford in
the Arabian Sea and the Greek-flagged chemical tanker Minerva Antonia in the
Mediterranean.
According to the
Equasis data base, the Laax is an 82,265 dwt , 2012 built
bulker managed by Piraeus based Grehel Ship Management. It is owned by Bailey
Navigation, which gives its address as “in care of” Grehel Ship Management.
Maritime risk
consultancies such as Ambrey have long cautioned that Houthi attacks are increasingly likely to extend
beyond the Red Sea. Meantime, CENTCOM continues to attempt to reduce the threat. It reports
that yesterday, in a separate action, , between 10:04 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. (Sanaa
time), U.S. Central Command forces
successfully destroyed five uncrewed aerial systems (UAS) over the Red Sea,
launched from a Houthi-controlled area of Yemen.