Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Seamen off limits on hazardous seas

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by their seafarers will not pass through the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea and indicate the itinerary of the vessel every time it documents the employment in the contract of the crew or before their deployment;

2. The seafarers to be assigned to passenger/ cruise ships are likewise required to affix their signatures to indicate their concurrenc­e to the affirmatio­n letter, confirming knowledge that the vessel they will be boarding will not traverse the aforementi­oned warlike operation areas;

3. The affirmatio­n letter duly executed by the LMAs and with the conforme of the seafarers shall be uploaded in the DMW Online Processing System for Sea-based together with the processed one-page covering standard employment contract; and

4. In case of manual processing, the affirmatio­n letter shall form part of the required documents submitted to the Sea-based Accreditat­ion Bureau.

EU force confident

The head of a European Union force protecting cargo ships from Houthi attacks in the Red Sea said the operation had met its goals, but freight traffic cannot increase without more warships.

“The distances that need to be covered are huge,” Rear Admiral Vasileios Gryparis told AFP at EU operation headquarte­rs in the central Greek city of Larissa.

“So far, because shipping is down by over 50 percent, it is possible to escort any ship that requests protection.”

“We have accompanie­d 79 ships so far and none has sustained damage while under our escort.”

“This is a point of reference on which we can build to increase the number of ships under protection... with the means currently at our disposal, this is not possible,” he said.

Operation Aspides, named for the Greek word for shield, was launched by the European Union in February with the goal of protecting internatio­nal shipping.

The Houthis began attacking ships in the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea in November, a campaign they say is intended to signal solidarity with the Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

They have vowed to target Israeli, British and American ships, as well as vessels heading to Israeli ports, disrupting traffic through the vital trade route off Yemen’s coast.

In March, the US Defense Department said Houthi rebels had attacked civilian and military ships sailing off Yemen at least 50 times since their assaults began.

The attacks have sent insurance costs spiraling for vessels transiting the Red Sea and prompted many shipping firms to take the far longer passage around the southern tip of Africa instead.

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