Weapons seized by Australia may have come from Iran, intended for Houthis
- More than 2,000 weapons were found on a ship off the coast of Oman
- They may have been sent by Iran and headed for Houthi rebels in Yemen, U.S. Navy says
- They were discovered by an Australian vessel that's part of a multinational naval partnership
- The U.N. has arms embargoes imposed on Somalia and rebels in Yemen
(CNN)An Australian naval ship has seized a large arms cache that may have come from Iran and headed to Yemen by way of Somalia.
The
Australian Navy said that one of its ships patrolling the region, the
HMAS Darwin, intercepted a small, stateless fishing vessel about 170
nautical miles off the coast of Oman when it made the discovery.
On
board they found more than 2,000 pieces of weaponry -- including 1,989
AK-47 assault rifles and 100 rocket-propelled grenades.
According
to a U.S. assessment, the weapons were believed to be initially sent
from Iran and were likely intended for Houthi rebels in Yemen, Lt. Ian
McConnaughey with the U.S. Navy told CNN.
U.S. Central Command is still gathering more information to determine the arms' final destination, McConnaughey said.
An
Australian Defense Ministry spokesman told CNN there were 18 people of
various nationalities on board the ship, but officials could not
initially confirm that their identification documents were valid.
Authorities
believe the weapons were headed for Somalia based on interviews with
crew members, but that information is preliminary and may change as the
investigation continues, the spokesman said.
The crew was allowed to depart after the weapons were seized, in accordance with international maritime law.
Combined Maritime Forces
Australia
is part of a multinational naval partnership, the Combined Maritime
Forces, that helps police more than three million square miles of
international waters.
CMF routinely
conducts boardings to determine the origin of unmarked vessels
(so-called "flag verification boardings") on a "regular basis,"
according to McConaughey. A similar number of weapons was seized in
September by coalition forces.
The
Darwin was on its first patrol in the region when it conducted this
seizure, Vice Admiral David Johnston of the Australian Navy said.
"Darwin's
successful boarding and subsequent seizure of the weapons concealed
under fishing nets highlights the need to remain vigilant in the
region," he said.
Previous accusations
Iran has been accused before of
attempting to arm the Shiite Houthis in a civil war that's largely a
proxy fight between those two parties and Yemeni President Abdu Rabu
Mansour Hadi, who is backed by Saudi Arabia and other Sunni gulf states.
For years, the Houthis have held sway in northern Yemen but lacked influence in the country's Sunni-led government.
The Houthi rebels seized the presidential palace in January last year, temporarily forcing Hadi from Sanaa, the capital city.
He returned in large part with the help of airstrikes
from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and
others that joined to battle Houthis last March.
Just
south of Yemen across the Gulf of Aden, Somalia has been mired in
similar violence since civil war broke out there in the early 1990s,
following the collapse of the Siad Barre regime. Its relatively
ineffective institutions -- Somalia has consistently been ranked as one
of the world's most fragile or failed states by international observers
-- largely failed to stymie the rise of piracy and Islamic extremism.
The United Nations has placed arms embargoes on Somalia and rebels in Yemen.
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