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Very first vessel struck by Yemen's Houthis in 2 weeks arrives in Djibouti, manager states

A container vessel that was hit by Houthi militants off Yemen on Saturday in the first such attack in two weeks, has arrived securely in Djibouti and the strike caused no injuries or water ingress, its Greek supervisor stated on Monday.

Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthis said on Sunday that they targeted the Liberia-flagged MV Groton in the Gulf of Aden with ballistic missiles, claiming their first attack on shipping lanes given that Israel performed a retaliatory airstrike in Hodeidah port on July 20.

The MV Groton was struck by a missile 60 nautical miles off the coast of Yemen, while en path from Dubai to Jeddah, Conbulk Shipmanagement Corporation said in a declaration. After the strike, it was diverted to Djibouti where it showed up on Sunday, the company stated.

No injuries nor contamination have actually been reported and there is no water ingress brought on by the hit, the company stated, including that the security of the team was a top priority.

Complete assessment of the damage will be made ... followed by the necessary repairs.

Following the strike, fire broke out in the cargo holds that were struck and in containers on the main deck, the business stated. The blaze was snuffed out by the team.

The attack is the first given that an obvious lull following Israel's attack on Hodeidah, which happened a day after a drone introduced by the Iranian-backed group struck Israeli economic hub Tel Aviv.

The Houthi militants have actually launched attacks on international shipping near Yemen since last November in solidarity with Palestinians in the war in between Israel and Hamas.

The attacks have drawn U.S. and British vindictive strikes and interrupted worldwide trade as ship owners reroute vessels away from the Red Sea and Suez Canal to sail the longer route around the southern pointer of Africa.

(source: Reuters)