Another bulker sailing southeast of
Aden, Yemen was targeted by the Houthis earlier 8 March. Initial reports are
that the vessel was not hit and that the crew is safe, but it appears that the
ship may be another example of outdated information leading to its targeting.
UK-based digital solutions provider
Vanguard identify the targeted ship as the Propel Fortune (58,000
dwt), a Singapore-registered bulker that departed India on February 25. The ship’s AIS
is displaying a message “Not connected to Israel,” without showing a
destination.
The
vessel appears to have been previously financed by an affiliate of the American
firm Oaktree Capital Management, the same company that had recently sold
the True Confidence which was attacked at the beginning of the
week killing three crewmembers. The Equasis database shows OCM Maritime
affiliated with the ship in 2021, but as of 2022, Propel Shipping of Singapore
is listed as the owner with the ship being managed by V. Ships of India.
UK Maritime Trade Operations said the master of an
unnamed vessel reported two explosions “ahead of the vessel.” The incident took place
approximately 50 nautical miles south southeast of Aden. UKMTO writes the
incident is under investigation. They later issued a follow up statement citing
the captain refuting claims the vessel was "subject to any collateral
damage." They said the vessel was proceeding to its next port.
EUNAVFOR’s new mission Aspides is
tracking incidents in the region. They are listing over 100 reports including
commercial vessels or warships targeted or the downing of attacks launched by
the Houthi.
The U.S. and European naval forces
continue their patrols and targeting Houthi weapons. The U.S. Central Command reports
yesterday U.S. forces conducted strikes against four mobile Houthi anti-ship
cruise missiles and one Houthi unmanned aerial vehicle. Additionally, CENTCOM forces shot down three UAVs launched from
Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen toward the Gulf of Aden.