Houthis claim responsibility for attack on Magic Seas ship in Red Sea
According to Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree, the ship was hit in the hull and the ship began to leak water
DUBAI, July 7. /TASS/. The Houthis from Yemen’s rebel Ansar Allah movement have claimed responsibility for the attack on the Magic Seas commercial vessel in the Red Sea.
"The Yemeni armed forces attacked the Magic Seas vessel owned by a company that violated the ban on the passage of ships to the occupied Palestinian ports. The attack was staged with the use of two uncrewed boats, five ballistic and cruise missiles, as well as three drones," Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree told the Houthi-controlled Al Masirah television channel.
According to Saree, the ship was hit in the hull and the ship began to leak water. Now it is about to sink, he said, adding that the crew evacuated successfully.
"The operation in the Red Sea was conducted after our naval forces had repeatedly warned the ship’s crew but our warnings were ignored," the spokesman said.
The Magic Seas dry-cargo carrier was attacked off the Yemeni coast on July 6. According to the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations Coordination Center (UKMTO), the attackers approached the ship in motor boats and used firearms, grenade launchers, and uncrewed boats to attack it. The ship received serious damage, caught fire and began to leak water.
Stem Shipping, a Greek company operating the vessel, confirmed earlier that all the 19 crewmembers had evacuated from the ship and were in safety.
The Magic Seas was en route from China to Turkey, loaded with ferrous metals and fertilizers.
Following the escalation of the conflict in the Gaza Strip in 2023, the Yemeni rebel movement Ansar Allah (the Houthis) wared Israel that it would shell its territory while barring ships associated with the Jewish state from passing through the waters of the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait until Tel Aviv ceased its military operation against Palestinian radical group Hamas in the embattled enclave. Since mid-November 2023, dozens of civilian ships have been attacked by the Houthi in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.
After a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas came into effect in the Gaza Strip, the Yemeni rebels suspended strikes on Israel but following the breakdown of the ceasefire, the Houthis resumed attacks on ships associated with Israel and on targets in Israel’s territory.
On March 15, the US started to carry out massive strikes on Houthi facilities in Yemen based on an order from President Donald Trump. The US Central Command said that the goal was to defend American interests and restore freedom of navigation. In response, the Ansar Allah movement carried out several attacks on the US aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in the northern part of the Red Sea, using missiles and drones.
The Houthis have claimed responsibility for attacking a commercial vessel for the first time since January 2025.