DFA: 9 Pinoy seafarers of MV Eternity C held by Houthis to be released
This image released by Ansar Allah Media Office in Yemen shows the Liberian-flagged bulk carrier Eternity C is seen as it sinks in the Red Sea on Wednesday, July 9, 2025. (Ansar Allah Media Office via AP)
Nine Filipino seafarers held hostage by the militant group Houthis in Yemen will soon be released, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Tuesday night, Dec. 2.
Citing information from the “authorities of the Sultanate of Oman,” the agency announced that the Filipino seafarers—who were kidnapped from the ill-fated M/V Eternity C and held hostage by the Houthis in the Red Sea—“will be released and will be transferred from Sana’a, Yemen, to Muscat, Oman.”
“The release was the outcome of efforts of Oman, in cooperation with the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs Secretary Ma. Theresa Lazaro personally discussed the plight of the Filipinos with her Omani counterpart, Foreign Minister Sayed Badr bin Hamad El-Busaidi, during a bilateral meeting in July, and again raised the matter during a phone call in November,” the statement read.
The Philippine Embassy in Muscat and the Migrant Workers Office-Muscat will “make arrangements for the safe and immediate return" of the Filipino seafarers, it added.
The DFA also expressed the Philippine government’s “sincerest appreciation” to the Sultanate of Oman for its mediation in the release of the Filipino seafarers.
The Filipinos were held captive since July this year after the Liberia-flagged vessel M/V Eternity C was attacked by Houthi rebels as it was passing through.
Some eight Filipino seafarers, who were part of the crew of M/V Eternity C, were earlier rescued at sea and repatriated to the Philippines.
To recall, a video allegedly released by the Houthi rebels on social media showed the Filipino seafarers to be “well.”