The M/V
Tutor appears to have sunk after it was struck in the stern last week
by an unmanned surface vessel in the Red Sea. The sinking marks the second commercial vessel sunk by the Houthis
since the Iranian-backed terrorist group began attacking merchant ships in
November in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. The sinking follows the loss
of the Rubymar in the Southern Red Sea in early March.
An update from the
United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) office on Tuesday said that
military authorities reported seeing debris and oil in the last known location
of the Tutor. “The vessel is believed to have sunk in position
14’19’N 041’14’E,” the update said.
The Liberian-flagged,
Greek-owned bulk carrier was initially struck in the stern by an unmanned small
craft on June 12 while underway in the Southern Red Sea. The vessel was later struck by a second time by “an unknown airborne
projectile.”
The incident marked
the first time Houthis had successfully used an unmanned surface vessel in
their attacks.
Photos posted online over the weekend showed
the Tutor sinking by its stern.
The sinking of
the Tutor comes seven months after the Houthis seized the Galaxy Leader car
carrier and its 25 crew members, who are still being held captive on board the
vessel off Yemen. Since then, the
Houthis have carried out numerous drone and missile attacks, posing a
significant threat to the lives of seafarers and global freedom of navigation.
The missing crew member from the Tutor is
the fourth civilian seafarer killed in the attacks, following the deaths of three seafarers on board the True Confidence after
the ship was struck by an anti-ship ballistic missile in the Gulf of Aden in
early March.