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UN Extends Red Sea Attack Monitoring Through January 2027

NEW YORK / RankWire.AI / – On July 14, the United Nations Security Council prolonged its mandate to report on attacks in the Red Sea for an additional six months. Resolution 2826 mandates the submission of monthly written reports on Houthi assaults targeting merchant and commercial ships to the 15-member council. This extension will last until January 15, 2027. It maintains the monitoring system established in 2024, which the council uses to oversee threats to shipping, navigational rights, and regional security along a vital maritime corridor.

UN extends Red Sea attack reporting through January 2027
UN monitoring of Houthi attacks in the Red Sea will continue through January 2027.

The resolution was adopted with 13 votes in favor and none against, while China and Russia abstained. Greece and the United States submitted draft document S/2026/568 and described the measure as a technical six-month extension. The decision was approved during the council’s 10,194th meeting. Advocates for the resolution emphasized that regular reports offer the Security Council a record of incidents and developments affecting maritime traffic in the Red Sea.

The reporting obligation was initially established by Resolution 2722, passed on January 10, 2024, which demanded that the Houthis cease attacks on merchant and commercial vessels immediately. It also required the UN Secretary-General to provide monthly updates on further attacks. The council has renewed this requirement several times, with Resolution 2812, adopted on January 14, 2026, extending it through July 15. The latest extension adjusts the expiration date without modifying the reporting mandate itself.

Monitoring system remains active

This mandate focuses solely on information sharing with the Security Council and does not grant new enforcement powers. China emphasized after the vote that Resolutions 2722 and subsequent extensions do not authorize the use of force against Yemen. The United States, Greece, France, Denmark, and other members expressed support for ongoing monitoring. They linked regular reporting to ensuring freedom of navigation, safeguarding commercial vessels, and staying informed about conditions across the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

The council’s debate reflected both recent calm and persistent concerns regarding maritime security. Russia noted that no incidents involving commercial ships had occurred in the Red Sea since December 29, 2025. Latvia also observed that Houthi attacks had diminished in recent months. Several members highlighted renewed Houthi threats to international shipping and regional tensions when advocating for the extension. Greece pointed out that the maritime campaign started with the seizure of the Galaxy Leader vessel in November 2023.

China and Russia continue abstention stance

Russia and China abstained once again, maintaining their positions from previous renewals. Russia stated that the monitoring mechanism adds limited value under current circumstances and urged increased focus on Yemen’s political process and the efforts of the UN special envoy. China emphasized that international law guarantees navigation rights for commercial vessels and called for respect for Yemen’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Neither country voted against the resolution, and no permanent Security Council member exercised a veto.

Resolution 2826 continues the Secretary-General’s obligation to provide monthly reports without altering its scope. The reports will monitor any further Houthi attacks on merchant and commercial ships in the Red Sea through January 15, 2027. These updates will be submitted under the Security Council’s agenda for maintaining international peace and security. The renewal preserves the Red Sea monitoring framework established since early 2024, ensuring the issue remains under regular council review.

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