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The crew of Eternity C cargo ship sunk by Yemen's Houthis in July arrive in Oman's Muscat after being released.

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Houthis release survivors of sunken cargo ship

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Published :  
20 hours ago|
  • Ten crew members of the cargo ship Eternity C, which was sunk by Yemen's Houthis in July, were released and flown from the capital Sanaa to Oman.
  • The release was reportedly secured through Omani mediation and was part of an agreement to repatriate 35 Yemenis stranded abroad.

Ten crew members of a cargo ship sunk by Yemen's Houthis in July have been released and flown from capital Sanaa to Oman, Houthi-affiliated media reported Wednesday.

"The crew of the ship Eternity C have been released through Omani mediation, and a plane is transporting them from Sanaa to Muscat," the Houthi Al-Masirah television channel reported.

Ten of the crew "left Sanaa airport" on Wednesday afternoon, the channel later said on X.

Footage broadcast by Oman TV showed the crew arriving in capital Muscat, where they were received by Omani and Philippine officials.

The news came a day after Philippine authorities said nine Filipino crew members of the ship were set to be released by the Iran-backed group.

A Houthi security source told AFP that the crew's release was part of an agreement to repatriate 35 Yemenis stranded abroad.

"An agreement was reached with the Omani side for the return of the sick and wounded who are abroad. They will be handed over to Sanaa, and the crew of the Eternity C will be handed over to the Omani side," the source said.

A Houthi political source, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, said that the deal was the result of "pressure" from Sanaa.

He said that "the Omani plane that transported the released crew also brought back wounded individuals... who were receiving treatment abroad, as well as others stranded in other countries".

He added that an Omani political delegation had also arrived in Yemen's capital to discuss "the progress of negotiations with Saudi Arabia regarding the humanitarian file".

The Houthis released a video of the attack on the Eternity C at the time, saying they had "rescued" an unspecified number of the crew and taken them to a safe location.

The Liberian-flagged Eternity C is one of two commercial vessels sunk within days of each other in the Red Sea in July.

The attacks were part of their campaign against maritime traffic that they accused of having links to ‘Israel’.