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Saudi-led alliance turns focus on north Yemen rebel zone

An airstrike in Yemen's capital Sana'a on November 5, 2015. Image: Ibrahem Qasim/CC-BY 4.0

The battle for the Yemeni province of Saada is heating up, military leaders said Thursday, as a Saudi-led alliance turns its focus on the rebel bastion used to fire missiles at the kingdom.

Iran-backed Shiite Houthi rebels have launched a string of ballistic missile attacks on Saudi Arabia, which shares a border with the war-torn country, from the northern province.

In the latest attack, the coalition said it shot down a missile late Wednesday fired by the Houthis who said they targeted storage tanks of Saudi oil giant Aramco in the border province of Jizan.

Experts have disputed Riyadh’s claims that it has successfully intercepted missiles fired by the Houthis.

Hundreds of soldiers from Saudi Arabia and Sudan, both allied with the government in its war against the rebels, have arrived in the north to reinforce Yemen’s troops deployed around Saada, Yemeni military officials said.

Prime Minister Ahmed Ben Dagher hailed the operation as “the end of Iran’s confessional plans for Yemen, executed by its Houthi allies.”

The rebels say their missile attacks on Saudi Arabia are retaliation for air raids by the Riyadh-led military coalition.

Both the coalition and the United States – a key ally of Saudi Arabia – have accused Iran of arming the Houthi rebels.

Tehran denies sending military supplies to the insurgents but has openly said it supports the Houthis’ fight in Yemen.

According to sources in the Yemeni army, the government alliance has advanced “several kilometers” towards the town of Saada, capital of the province of the same name, since the reinforcements arrived.

The embattled government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi was driven out of Yemen’s capital in 2014 by the Houthis, who control Sanaa and much of northern Yemen.

The coalition led by mainly Sunni Saudi Arabia has since struggled to close in on rebel strongholds, including Maarib – a key province in central Yemen – and Hodeidah, the country’s largest port.

Nearly 10,000 people have been killed since the coalition joined the Yemen war in 2015, triggering what the United Nations has called the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

Rights groups have warned that both the coalition and rebels are potentially guilty of war crimes. The United Nations last year blacklisted the coalition for the maiming and killing of children.


With reporting from AFP

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