The Rubymar Carried Fertilizer That Threatens Red Sea, U.S. Says

A British-owned cargo ship sank within the Purple Sea about two weeks after being broken in a missile assault by the Iran-backed Houthi militia, and the fertilizer it was carrying now posed an environmental threat, the US army mentioned late Saturday.

The assault final month on the vessel, the Rubymar, concerned two antiship ballistic missiles launched from Yemen. The sinking gave the impression to be the primary for the reason that Houthis started concentrating on ships in an effort to place stress on Israel to finish its army siege in Gaza.

The U.S. army’s Central Command confirmed the Rubymar’s sinking in a statement on social media. It mentioned the ship sank early Saturday whereas carrying a load of 21,000 metric tons of ammonium phosphate sulfate fertilizer that now offered “an environmental threat within the Purple Sea.”

The ship additionally poses a “subsurface impression threat” to different ships transferring by the world, a busy worldwide delivery lane, the Central Command mentioned.

The Rubymar was an “environmental catastrophe” even earlier than sinking as a result of the assault created an 18-mile oil slick, Central Command warned final month. It mentioned that the catastrophe may worsen if the fertilizer had been to spill into the ocean.

No different particulars concerning the sinking, or the dangers it posed to the surroundings or to business delivery, had been instantly out there on Sunday morning. The Rubymar sailed with a Belize flag. The ship’s operator, Blue Fleet Group, based mostly in Greece, didn’t reply to an inquiry.

After the assault final month, the Rubymar’s 24 crew members had been taken to Djibouti by a vessel operated by a French delivery firm. Djibouti port officers mentioned on the time that the crew members had been from Syria, Egypt, India and the Philippines.