Greek Warship to Rejoin EU Mission in Red Sea on Sun.

Defense ministry sources in Athens said the Hellenic Navy frigate Hydra will remain docked in Djibouti for resupply until then

A Hellenic Navy frigate participating in the EUNAVFOR “Aspides” mission to protect shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden will remain docked in a Djibouti port until Sunday for resupply, defense ministry sources in Athens said on Friday.

The EU military mission aims to protect vessels plying the specific sea lanes from the Iran-backed Houthi rebels operating in Yemen.

The Greek warship “Hydra” has been fitted with the Drone Dome anti-drome system and with a new electronic warfare system.

The Hydra is a German-made MEKO 200HN type frigate laid in a Hamburg shipyard in 1991 and presented to the Hellenic Navy in October 1992.

The latest attack against a vessel in the Gulf of Aden this past week claimed the lives of three sailors, as a missile or drone struck a bulker. Another 20 crew-members and three security guards on board the “True Confidence” were evacuated by an Indian navy warship to Djibouti.

The Barbados-flagged, American-owned and Cypriot-managed vessel was hit and set on fire on Wednesday as it was sailing some 50 nautical miles south of Aden.

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