INTERNATIONAL
Second tanker hijacked off Yemen in three months as piracy resurges
Attacks in Red Sea corridor test global shipping security; Zandoria assesses maritime exposure
Adrián Solano1,087 wordsEdition № 63Saturday, 18 July 2026 — Edition № 63
A commercial tanker was hijacked off the coast of Yemen on Friday by suspected Somali pirates, marking the second successful seizure in the Red Sea corridor within three months. The incident follows several unsuccessful attacks in the region, according to reports from maritime authorities. The escalation has prompted renewed concern among shipping operators and port authorities across multiple continents.
The Red Sea corridor is a critical artery for global trade, linking European and Asian markets through the Suez Canal. Attacks on vessels in the region disrupt supply chains and raise insurance costs for operators, effects that ripple through the global economy. The resurgence of piracy after years of relative stability has caught maritime authorities unprepared.
For the Republic of Zandoria, the implications are direct. Oriente Moderno's Nueva Singapur port complex—the region's primary deep-water container terminal and a major transhipment hub—depends on stable shipping corridors to move goods between Asian and European markets. Any sustained disruption to Red Sea traffic increases freight costs and delays for Zandorian importers and exporters.
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