Michelle Njuguna

Two vessels from CMA CGM, the world’s third-largest container ‍shipping line, have traveled through the Suez Canal, the authority that runs the ‍waterway said on Tuesday, in a sign the disruptions linked to the Gaza war could be easing.

While the Suez Canal provides the fastest link between Asia and Europe, since November 2023, shipping companies have had to take much longer ⁠routes because Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis attacked commercial vessels, saying they were acting in solidarity with Palestinians during warfare in Gaza.

Before Tuesday’s announcement from the Suez Canal Authority, CMA CGM had made limited passages through the Suez Canal when security conditions allowed.

CMA CGM did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Companies remain cautious, but since a fragile ceasefire in Gaza took effect ‍on October 10, no Houthi attacks on ships have been reported, leading shipping companies to reconsider ‍using the Suez Canal, ‍which Egypt counts on ⁠as a major source of foreign ‌currency.

The canal’s authority said on ⁠Tuesday that the vessel ‍CMA CGM Jacques Saade crossed the canal from the north on its journey from Morocco ⁠to Malaysia, while the CMA CGM Adonis passed from the south.

A schedule published on the ‌CMA CGM website showed that the French company will use the passage for its India-US INDAMEX service from January.

On Friday, Maersk said that one of its vessels had navigated the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait ‍between Yemen and the Horn of Africa for the first time in nearly two years.

The Danish company said it had no firm plans to fully reopen the route, but would take a “stepwise approach towards gradually resuming navigation.”


-Al Arabiya

Comments
* The email will not be published on the website.