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  • The United Nations held an unusual session Wednesday to express fears of "catastrophe" if a decaying oil tanker abandoned off Yemen's coast with 1.1 million barrels of crude on board ruptures into the Red Sea. A breach of the 45-year-old FSO Safer, anchored off the port of Hodeida, would have disastrous results for marine life and tens of thousands of impoverished people who depend on fishing for their livelihood. Hodeida is under the control of the Iran-backed Huthis. The UN Security Council said it had sent details of a plan for an inspection team to conduct light repairs and determine the next steps to the Huthi rebels on Tuesday and was expecting a response as soon as possible. On Sunday, the UN said the Huthis had agreed in principle to the assessment. But they did the same in the summer of 2019, only to cancel a UN mission from Djibouti at the last minute. Effectively a floating storage platform, the Safer has had virtually no maintenance for five years since war broke out in the country where the Huthis have seized much of the north from the internationally recognized government. The tanker could break up or explode, causing a disaster that experts have said could take up to 30 years for the area's ecology to recover from. A leak in the engine room had been plugged in May, but the British mission to the UN insisted that "a permanent solution is urgently needed." "Its condition is deteriorating daily, increasing the potential for an oil spill," Inger Andersen, head of the United Nations Environment Programme, told the Council. "Time is running out for us now to act in a coordinated manner to prevent a looming environmental, economic and humanitarian catastrophe," she said. UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Mark Lowcock said he hoped a UN assessment mission would be carried out "within the next few weeks." "I have briefed you 15 times over the last 15 months on the Safer tanker," he added, hinting at frustration over the lack of action. Like other economic and aid issues in Yemen, the plight of the tanker has become a bargaining chip, with the Huthis accused of using the threat of disaster to secure control of the value of the cargo. In June, the Huthis said they wanted guarantees the vessel would be repaired and that the value of the oil on board used to pay salaries of their employees. But the Yemeni government has said the money for the oil should be used for health and humanitarian projects in the shattered country, which is again on the brink of famine after long years of conflict. Hodeida port is a lifeline for northern Yemen, with 90 percent of all supplies coming through it. prh/st/to
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  • UN fears 'catastrophe' if Yemen oil tanker ruptures
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