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Two South Koreans seized by Houthi rebels released

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Two South Koreans who were seized by Houthi rebels in Yemen earlier this week have been released, the foreign ministry said Wednesday.

The two, whose identities were withheld, were among 16 people on three boats seized by the rebels Monday for allegedly violating their territorial waters.

All of them were released, along with their vessels, early Wednesday morning (Korea time) and are safe and well, the ministry said, adding the families of the two Koreans were informed of the release.

The two Koreans were aboard a tugboat and a drilling rig that belong to the South Korean firm Woongjin Development Co. The third vessel was another tug boat of Saudi Arabian nationality that is chartered by a company of the United Arab Emirates.

The Korean vessels will head for Jizan, Saudi Arabia, around noon and are expected to arrive in two days, the ministry said.

The seizure took place in waters about 15 miles west of Yemen's Kamaran Island. The three vessels were on the way to the Berbera port in Somalia after departing from Jizan, Saudi Arabia. After the seizure, the rebels took the boats to the Salif port in Hodeidah, Yemen.

A Houthi official later told Reuters they were willing to release them once they confirmed they were not related to the countries of aggression.

South Korean officials first learned of the seizure after one of the two Koreans sent a social media message to their company. The government then deployed its anti-piracy Cheonghae Unit, which has been operating off the coast of Somalia, to back the rescue efforts.

The ministry said the government will work to strengthen safety measures for Korean citizens and ships to prevent such incidents from recurring in the future. (Yonhap)




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