The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Blast rocks oil tanker off Saudi port

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An explosion rocked a Singapore-flagged oil tanker off the Saudi port city of Jeddah Monday, the vessel’s owner said, in the latest apparent strike on energy sector targets in the kingdom.

RIYADH: An explosion rocked a Singapore-flagged oil tanker off the Saudi port city of Jeddah Monday, the vessel’s owner said, in the latest apparent strike on energy sector targets in the kingdom.

All 22 sailors aboard the tanker BW Rhine escaped unhurt after the blast struck just after midnight, Singaporeb­ased shipping company Hafnia said, but it did not exclude the possibilit­y of an oil spill.

No group has so far claimed responsibi­lity for the alleged attack, but it comes as Iranbacked Huthi rebels in neighbouri­ng Yemen step up cross-border strikes against Saudi targets in retaliatio­n for a five-year military campaign led by Riyadh.

“BW Rhine has been hit from an external source whilst dischargin­g at Jeddah... causing an explosion and subsequent fire onboard,” Hafnia said in a statement, without specifying what struck the vessel.

“The crew have extinguish­ed the fire with assistance from the shore fire brigade and tug boats, and all 22 seafarers have been accounted for with no injuries,” it added.

Saudi authoritie­s did not immediatel­y confirm the blast off Jeddah, a key Red Sea port and distributi­on centre for oil giant Saudi Aramco.

Hafnia reported “hull damage” in the blast.

“It is possible that some oil has escaped from the vessel, but this has not been confirmed and instrument­ation currently indicates that oil levels on board are at the same level as before the incident,” Hafnia said.

Dryad Global, a London-based maritime intelligen­ce firm, also reported the explosion, saying it struck a vessel while “carrying out operations within the main tanker anchorage at the Saudi Aramco Jeddah port”.

But it identified the Dominican-flagged tanker Desert Rose or the Saudi-flagged Al Amal Al Saudi as the possible targets.

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said it was aware of an explosion and warned vessels in the area to exercise “extreme caution”.

“It’s an isolated incident and therefore we don’t need any significan­t change in mentality or activity,” Kevin Wright, an analyst at data intelligen­ce firm Kpler, said in an interview with Dubai-based consultant Gulf Intelligen­ce.

“We will continue to see these pinpricks but they have limited impact.”

The incident comes after an explosion last month rocked a Greek-operated oil tanker docked at Saudi Arabia’s southern port of Shuqaiq, an attack that a Riyadhled military coalition blamed on Yemen’s Huthi rebels.

No injuries were reported in that blast on the Maltese-flagged Agrari tanker, according to its Greece-based operator TMS Tankers. Dryad Global said that blast was caused by a “waterborne improvised explosive device” launched by the Huthis.

Just days earlier, the Huthi rebels said they struck a plant operated by Saudi Aramco in Jeddah with a Quds-2 missile. Aramco said that strike tore a hole in an oil tank, triggering an explosion and fire.

The incidents, which underscore the Huthis’ advancing arsenal and the vulnerabil­ity of Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastruc­ture, come as the rebels escalate attacks on Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia has been targeted with dozens of ballistic missile and drone attacks since the start of last year, many of which the kingdom claims to have successful­ly intercepte­d.

Saudi Arabia is stuck in a military quagmire in Yemen, which has been locked in conflict since the rebels took control of the capital Sanaa in 2014 and went on to seize much of the north.

Riyadh led a coalition that intervened to support the internatio­nally recognised government the following year, but the conflict has shown no real signs of abating since.

Saudi Arabia has repeatedly accused regional rival Iran of supplying sophistica­ted weapons to the Huthis, a charge Tehran denies.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have been killed and millions displaced in Yemen’s war, which the United Nations has called the world’s worst humanitari­an disaster.

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 ??  ?? The BW Rhine in a file photo.
The BW Rhine in a file photo.

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