The National - News

Yemen ‘time bomb’ tanker fundraiser falls short of $144m target, UN says

- JAMES REINL

Donor government­s have pledged $38 million towards a mission to stop a rusting oil tanker from releasing a potentiall­y catastroph­ic amount of oil off the coast of Yemen.

However, this is barely a quarter of the $144m the UN is seeking to unload, remove and replace the FSO Safer –a creaking hulk moored off the Yemeni port of Hodeidah and laden with 1.1 million barrels of crude.

“We received around $38m in funding to address the Red Sea’s ticking time bomb,” the UN Developmen­t Programme said on social media.

“We are so thankful to our donors and are hopeful for additional funding in the coming days that will allow us to begin urgent action.”

UN spokesman Farhan Haq said the pledges were a “strong start to the push” that would help the first phase of the operation.

But he said “we will need more money” in the coming months. The UN said the vessel could spill its cargo at any moment, causing a disaster four times worse than the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill near Alaska and that would cost $20 billion to clean up.

Earlier in the meeting, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged donors to “provide full funding so that work can start immediatel­y”.

A spill would release “more than one million barrels of oil into the Red Sea, devastatin­g the coast, destroying livelihood­s, depleting fisheries and potentiall­y disrupting traffic through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal”, Mr Guterres said in a video message.

This would hurt tourism and fishing, as well as desalinati­on plants across Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea and Djibouti, and impede a shipping lane that carries about 10 per cent of global trade, he said.

The UN released a video explaining how the tanker would be emptied, removed and replaced, under a plan agreed to with Iran-backed Houthi rebels who control the coastal area and nearby waters.

The pledging meeting, co-hosted by the UN and the Netherland­s, came more than two months after the world body and the Houthis signed a deal to transfer the crude to another vessel and give the rebels a replacemen­t.

On Tuesday, the Houthis used social media to criticise the UN for “not presenting an operationa­l plan” to maintain the tanker. It remains unclear whether this statement affected the fund-raising effort.

Yemen has been mired in civil war since 2014, when the Houthis took control of the capital Sanaa and much of the north, forcing the internatio­nally recognised government to flee. A Saudi-led coalition entered the war in March 2015 to restore the government.

A truce between rebel, pro-government and coalition forces announced last month has raised hopes of a lasting peace. This could help resolve the FSO Safer issue and stop a humanitari­an crisis that is causing millions to go hungry.

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