logo
'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea

'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea

France 2417-07-2025
The 38-year-old realised what sounded like a "knock" from inside the vessel was gunfire being exchanged by ship security and Huthi rebels swarming the ship in small boats.
The July 6 assault on the Greek-owned Magic Seas broke a months-long lull in attacks by Yemen's Huthi rebels on Red Sea shipping, which began after the start of the Gaza war in October 2023.
Crew members scrambled to reach the "muster station" at the centre of the ship, considered the safest place should a projectile strike the vessel.
"There was panic, but we knew we had to move. It's like we were on autopilot," said Cocoy, who asked to be referred to by his nickname as he undergoes a debriefing.
"(The crew) were in a daze, but they were all rushing to do their assigned jobs for our safety protocol... maybe I looked dazed too," he told AFP.
"There were speedboats from the right, left and back of our ship," he said, relaying what the ship's security team had told him.
"There was also a bigger boat with around 15 crew who were attempting to board our ship, but luckily, our armed guards were able to stop them."
The group huddled inside the muster station for nearly five hours as the ship's three armed Sri Lankan security guards tried to stave off the attack.
"I lost count of how many hits we took," he told AFP of Huthi projectiles.
A Huthi spokesman would later claim that five ballistic and cruise missiles and three drones had been employed in the attack.
One would breach the hull.
"The flooding had started so we decided to abandon the ship," Cocoy said. "We deployed our lifeboat, all 22 of us, and left our main vessel."
Filipino sailors make up as much as 30 percent of the world's commercial shipping force. The nearly $7 billion they sent home in 2023 accounted for about a fifth of remittances sent to the archipelago nation.
While a seafarer for more than 15 years, it was Cocoy's first passage through the Red Sea, and what he called a case of "really bad timing".
"During the gunfight, the faces of my wife and child flashed before my eyes. I kept thinking... will they survive without me?" he said.
"I thought I was going to die."
After abandoning ship, Cocoy and his shipmates spent three hours floating in the Red Sea before being picked up by a Panama-flagged container ship.
"They were the longest hours of my life," he said.
The Magic Seas was no longer within their sight as it sank beneath the waves.
'We were just lucky'
A day after Cocoy's ordeal, another vessel crewed largely by Filipino sailors, the Eternity C, was attacked and sunk.
Ten of those aboard were rescued. Another 15 are dead or missing.
It was the deadliest such assault since three people were killed in a missile attack on another ship in March last year.
On Wednesday night, eight Filipinos rescued from the Eternity C landed at Manila's international airport.
The Iran-backed Huthis said last week they had "rescued" an unspecified number of the Eternity C's crew and taken them to a safe location, prompting charges of kidnapping by the US government.
Maritime news journal Lloyd's List reported six Filipino seafarers as "believed taken hostage".
The Philippine government has so far offered no information about the possibility of either hostages or negotiations.
"I feel terrified for the (missing) Eternity C crew," Cocoy told AFP.
"We were just lucky, because all of us survived... I pray that many of their crew can still be located alive."
Cocoy, who is plagued by nightmares of the attack, said he is unsure if he will return to the sea.
"What happened to us was not normal," he said, urging shipowners to find routes that avoid the Red Sea.
"It's something that no one should ever experience."
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Activist boat Handala seized off Gaza brought to Israel
Activist boat Handala seized off Gaza brought to Israel

France 24

time12 hours ago

  • France 24

Activist boat Handala seized off Gaza brought to Israel

Campaigners from the Freedom Flotilla Coalition had attempted to breach an Israeli naval blockade of the Palestinian territory of Gaza, but were intercepted late Saturday. The legal rights centre Adalah told AFP its lawyers were in Ashdod and had demanded to speak to the 21-strong international crew, which includes two French parliamentarians and two Al Jazeera journalists. "Israeli forces intercepted the Handala in international waters at around midnight on 27 July 2025 and contact with the activists was lost. This peaceful civilian mission was dedicated to the children of Gaza," the group said. "This ship, which sailed as part of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, is part of the coalition's ongoing efforts to break Israel's illegal and deadly blockade on the Palestinian people in Gaza." Earlier, the Israeli foreign ministry said the Israeli navy stopped the Handala to prevent it from entering the coastal waters off the territory of Gaza. "The vessel is safely making its way to the shores of Israel. All passengers are safe," it said. Just before midnight local time on Saturday, video live stream broadcast from the Handala showed Israeli troops boarding the vessel. An online tracker showed the ship in international waters west of Gaza. The ship had been on course to try to break an Israeli naval blockade of Gaza and bring a small quantity of humanitarian aid to the territory's Palestinian residents. The Handala's crew had said before their capture in a post on X that they would go on a hunger strike if the Israeli army intercepted the boat and detained its passengers. On board were activists from 10 countries, including two French MPs form the left-wing France Unbowed party, Emma Fourreau and Gabrielle Cathala. A previous boat sent by Freedom Flotilla, the Madleen, was also intercepted by the Israeli military in international waters on June 9 and towed to Ashdod. It carried 12 campaigners, including prominent Swedish activist Greta Thunberg. The activists were eventually expelled by Israel.

Report: European missile group MBDA selling parts for bombs that killed children in Gaza
Report: European missile group MBDA selling parts for bombs that killed children in Gaza

France 24

time17-07-2025

  • France 24

Report: European missile group MBDA selling parts for bombs that killed children in Gaza

The New York Times documents the mass deportation of 1 million Afghans from Iran. It's one of the worst displacement crises of the past decade, according to The Times. Since the beginning of the year, more than 1.4 million Afghans have fled or been deported from Iran as the Tehran clamps down on undocumented refugees. "Where do we even go now?" is a question many of them are asking. Many Afghan refugees have lived in Iran their whole life and now face prospect of having to move to a country that's foreign to them. The paper explains that Iran is host to the world's largest refugee population of about 4 million people, with 95 percent of them believed to be Afghans. They are limited to low-skill, physical work and can only live in 10 of the 31 Iranian provinces. Since the war with Israel however, Afghans in Iran have faced increasing xenophobia. Officials and state media have claimed without proof that Afghans were recruited by Israel and the US to stage terrorist attacks, seize military sites and build drones. This has led to a wave of attacks against Afghans. Some of them have been denied access to hospitals or basic food supplies, which has also precipitated their departure. The Afghan paper Hasht e Subh, for its part, notes that Afghanistan 's economy could be pushed to the brink. Vital remittance money sent from Afghan refugees in Iran to relatives in Afghanistan has been abruptly cut off. Furthermore, the mass influx of Afghans to Afghanistan has also intensified the housing, healthcare and unemployment crises in the country. The Guardian has published an exclusive report which shows that Europe's biggest bomb maker sold parts for bombs used by Israel in attacks that killed children in Gaza. The paper notes that concerns are mounting about the extent to which European companies are benefiting from the devastation in Gaza. The paper's investigation, alongside investigative websites Disclose and Follow the Money, examines the supply chain of the GBU-39 bomb. EU bombmaker MBDA owns a factory in the US state of Alabama, which produces parts fitted to the GBU-39, made by Boeing. Revenue from the US company flows to its UK branch which then passes on profits to MBDA, which is headquartered in France. Last year, the French company distributed €400 million to its shareholders, notably BAE Systems, Airbus and Leonardo, which are British, French and Italian respectively. Using open-source data, the investigation verified 24 cases where the GBU-39 bomb was used against civilians in Gaza, each one including children or several child casualties. Many of these attacks took place without warning and at night in places of refuge – attacks that the UN and Amnesty International have called suspected war crimes. Turning to the US, The Washington Post has interviewed former guards and inmates at the Trump administration's new detention centre in the Everglades and they have shed light on its appalling conditions. It was hastily built in eight days and cost $450 million. The temporary migrant detention centre is rather crudely nicknamed "Alligator Alcatraz" by the Republicans. Former prison guards told The Washington Post that the food served is cold and that they get one 15-minute break during a 12-hour shift, in which they are standing the whole time. Detainees face a lack of basic hygienic products and backed-up portaloos cause a stench to float across the centre. As one academic writes in an opinion piece for The Conversation, the centre showcases Trump's penchant for visual cruelty. Staying with The Washington Post, the paper focuses on an unusual sporting alliance – basketball and chess. Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen and former NBA great Derrick Rose have paired up to share their love of chess. Rose has harboured a passion for chess for a long time but hesitated to talk about it with his teammates because "for some reason he felt the cerebral game was out of place in the basketball space". Rose paired up with Carlsen last weekend to host Chesstival in Las Vegas. The all-day affair brought together chess masters and NBA players for a series of tournaments. Filmed with close-up angles and players dressed casually, the idea is to make chess more accessible but all the while respecting its traditions.

'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea
'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea

France 24

time17-07-2025

  • France 24

'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea

The 38-year-old realised what sounded like a "knock" from inside the vessel was gunfire being exchanged by ship security and Huthi rebels swarming the ship in small boats. The July 6 assault on the Greek-owned Magic Seas broke a months-long lull in attacks by Yemen's Huthi rebels on Red Sea shipping, which began after the start of the Gaza war in October 2023. Crew members scrambled to reach the "muster station" at the centre of the ship, considered the safest place should a projectile strike the vessel. "There was panic, but we knew we had to move. It's like we were on autopilot," said Cocoy, who asked to be referred to by his nickname as he undergoes a debriefing. "(The crew) were in a daze, but they were all rushing to do their assigned jobs for our safety protocol... maybe I looked dazed too," he told AFP. "There were speedboats from the right, left and back of our ship," he said, relaying what the ship's security team had told him. "There was also a bigger boat with around 15 crew who were attempting to board our ship, but luckily, our armed guards were able to stop them." The group huddled inside the muster station for nearly five hours as the ship's three armed Sri Lankan security guards tried to stave off the attack. "I lost count of how many hits we took," he told AFP of Huthi projectiles. A Huthi spokesman would later claim that five ballistic and cruise missiles and three drones had been employed in the attack. One would breach the hull. "The flooding had started so we decided to abandon the ship," Cocoy said. "We deployed our lifeboat, all 22 of us, and left our main vessel." Filipino sailors make up as much as 30 percent of the world's commercial shipping force. The nearly $7 billion they sent home in 2023 accounted for about a fifth of remittances sent to the archipelago nation. While a seafarer for more than 15 years, it was Cocoy's first passage through the Red Sea, and what he called a case of "really bad timing". "During the gunfight, the faces of my wife and child flashed before my eyes. I kept thinking... will they survive without me?" he said. "I thought I was going to die." After abandoning ship, Cocoy and his shipmates spent three hours floating in the Red Sea before being picked up by a Panama-flagged container ship. "They were the longest hours of my life," he said. The Magic Seas was no longer within their sight as it sank beneath the waves. 'We were just lucky' A day after Cocoy's ordeal, another vessel crewed largely by Filipino sailors, the Eternity C, was attacked and sunk. Ten of those aboard were rescued. Another 15 are dead or missing. It was the deadliest such assault since three people were killed in a missile attack on another ship in March last year. On Wednesday night, eight Filipinos rescued from the Eternity C landed at Manila's international airport. The Iran-backed Huthis said last week they had "rescued" an unspecified number of the Eternity C's crew and taken them to a safe location, prompting charges of kidnapping by the US government. Maritime news journal Lloyd's List reported six Filipino seafarers as "believed taken hostage". The Philippine government has so far offered no information about the possibility of either hostages or negotiations. "I feel terrified for the (missing) Eternity C crew," Cocoy told AFP. "We were just lucky, because all of us survived... I pray that many of their crew can still be located alive." Cocoy, who is plagued by nightmares of the attack, said he is unsure if he will return to the sea. "What happened to us was not normal," he said, urging shipowners to find routes that avoid the Red Sea. "It's something that no one should ever experience." © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store