A Sri Lanka Navy warship is ready to depart to join the fight to protect the international sea lanes from the Yemen-backed Houthi rebels, Navy Media Spokesman Captain Gayan Wickramasuriya said.
Speaking to NewsWire, Captain Wickramasuriya said the ship is to be deployed to protect the international waters covering the Red Sea, Arabic Sea, Gulf of Aden, and adjacent sea lanes used by merchant vessels.
He further said that the Sri Lanka Navy warship is being deployed as per the presidential order, but an exact date of deployment is yet to be confirmed.
Captain Wickramasuriya went on to say that initially one ship would be deployed as part of the Operation Prosperity Guardians, the Naval operation underway at the Red Sea and adjoining trade routes.
“Discussions will be held and based on the warship’s capability it will be deployed to any one of the sea lanes requiring protection from the Houthi rebels,” he said.
Captain Wickramasuriya also stated that the deployment of more ships or swapping of ships will take place based on the current requirements and economic situation of Sri Lanka, and a discussion on the matter.
Stating that there is no additional cost for the deployment of the warship, he said the cost depends on the operation and is similar to the cost borne by Navy vessels engaged in drug prevention raids in the international waters of Southern Sri Lanka.
Last week, President Ranil Wickremesinghe announced that Sri Lanka has decided to deploy a Navy Vessel at the Red Sea to prevent Houthi Rebels from attacking ships, blocking trade along the sea route.
Addressing an event in Colombo on Wednesday (Jan 03), the President said Sri Lanka will deploy the Navy vessel at the Red Sea for a cost of Rs. 250 million every fortnight.
Pointing out that prices of goods may increase due to the various wars underway, especially in Ukraine and Palestine, the President said ships have also stopped using the Red Sea route due to continuous attacks by the Houthi Rebels and the rerouting of these ships around South Africa will also indirectly increase prices of goods.
According to foreign media, the Yemen-based militants have carried out at least 23 attacks in response to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza since Dec. 19.
The Iranian-backed Houthis have vowed to continue targeting vessels they consider linked to Israel and the situation in the strategically vital southern Red Sea is now at a stand-off.
The Bab al-Mandab strait is a critical waterway through which almost 15% of global trade passes. If attacks continue, the fear is that fuel prices will rise and supply chains will be damaged. (NewsWire)