UN's IMO working 'tirelessly' to solve Red Cea crisis
LONDON
The International Maritime Organization (IMO) is working "tirelessly" to solve the Red Sea crisis, which is severely disrupting the global transport of goods, its head Arsenio Dominguez told AFP.
Yemen's Huthi rebels, supported by Iran, have launched dozens of attacks against ships in the Red Sea since November, targeting boats headed for Israel in an act of "solidarity" with inhabitants of the Gaza Strip, which is in the grip of the war between Israel and Hamas.
Despite retaliatory strikes by the U.S. and U.K., the rebels are still launching attacks.
The IMO, the United Nations agency responsible for security at sea, is working to ensure that "parties continue to talk so that the situation does not degenerate any further, and we can return to a safe maritime environment," Secretary General Dominguez told AFP.
"We are working tirelessly to coordinate action that will lead to a resolution," Dominguez added from the IMO's London headquarters.
The region is crucial for the global transport of goods, with around 12 percent of global maritime trade normally passing through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which controls access to the southern Red Sea.
Many shipowners have decided to stop operating in the Red Sea, instead sending their ships on the longer route around the south of Africa.
But "this is not the ideal solution", admitted Dominguez, as it increases the cost of transport, and ultimately the price of the cargo.
"We now have more than 60 percent of the annual tonnage the normally goes through the Suez Canal now going around southern Africa," he explained.
Insurance has also gone up and increased fuel use is creating additional costs.
The IMO's objective is to "provide practical and operational measures so that ships can continue to operate", he added.
Despite the headwinds, Dominguez said he remained "optimistic" about a resolution to the conflict.