The Phnom Penh Post

Yemen forces plan siege of key rebel-held port

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PRO-GOVERNMENT forces in Yemen are preparing to surround a key Red Sea port in a bid to force Huthi rebels to surrender it without a fight, military sources said on Wednesday.

At least 60 fighters were killed in the latest clashes and air strikes, according to medical sources.

Loyalist fighters backed by Saudi and Emirati forces are sending reinforcem­ents ahead of a “new operation” to enter Hodeida city and seize its port, a commander from one of the forces said.

Hodeida port is the main conduit for humanitari­an aid into Yemen, where years of war have left some 22 million people in need of food aid.

Colonel Sadiq Duwaid, spokesman for the “National Resistance”, one of three main forces taking part in the operation, said it was “being bolstered by new forces . . . that will take part in retaking Hodeida”.

“First, we will cut off supply lines, especially between [rebel-held capital] Sanaa and Hodeida, then we will place the Huthis under siege and bring them down, perhaps without a fight,” he said.

Clashes broke out east of the port city on Wednesday while the Saudiled coalition carried out numerous air strikes on rebel positions, Yemeni military sources said.

Seven pro-government fighters were killed and 14 wounded, according to medical sources in Hodeida province, while at least 53 rebels also died.

The deadly clashes come a day after an AFP reporter saw a large military convoy heading towards Hodeida from Mokha, 180km to the south.

UN ‘extremely concerned’

Hodeida lies 230km from Sanaa, which the Huthis seized in 2014. This prompted a Saudi-led military interventi­on in Yemen the following year, aimed at propping up the internatio­nally-recognised government of exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.

The coalition accuses the rebels of using Hodeida as a launchpad for attacks on shipping in the Red Sea and for smuggling in rockets. The Iranbacked insurgents have in recent months ramped up missile attacks against neighbouri­ng Saudi Arabia.

Nearly 10,000 people have been killed since the Saudi-led alliance launched its interventi­on in Yemen in March 2015. More than 2,200 others have died from cholera and millions are on the verge of famine in what the United Nations says is the world’s gravest humanitari­an crisis.

The UN warned on Tuesday that any operation aimed at seizing Hodeida would disrupt the entry of aid ship- ments to Yemen, 70 percent of which flow through the rebel-held port.

“We are extremely concerned about the situation around Hodeida,” said spokesman Stephane Dujarric, adding that the UN had taken precaution­s in case of “further escalation”.

‘Mass mobilisati­on’

The UAE, Saudi Arabia’s main coalition ally, set up a force in early 2018 to ramp up the coastal offensive, leading a disparate collective of groups with the stated goal of taking Hodeida.

The forces include the “Giant Bri- gades” – a former elite unit of the Yemeni army rebuilt by the UAE – which has been at the vanguard of the offensive, reinforced by thousands of fighters from southern Yemen.

The “National Resistance” is made up of loyalists of Yemen’s ex-President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was assassinat­ed by his former Huthi allies in December. It is commanded by his nephew Tarek Saleh.

The third force, the “Tihama Resistance”, is named for a Red Sea coastal region from which it draws most of its fighters, who are loyal to Hadi.

The fighting in western Yemen has been fierce, slowed by landmines that Yemeni military sources say have been laid by the insurgents.

The Huthis have said they are ready to thwart any coalition operation and have urged Hodeida residents to join their ranks to prevent the city’s capture.

Hamoud Abbad, the Huthi-appointed governor of Sanaa, has called for “mass mobilisati­on” to defend the front and appealed to tribesmen in the area.

Rebel-run media outlets on Wednesday claimed a drone attack on “the enemy’s air defences on the west coast” and said an overland counter-attack south of Hodeida had “inflicted heavy losses on the enemy”.

But in a phone call to Hodeida’s governor, Prime Minister Ahmed bin Dagher called on the city’s residents to “close ranks . . . against the Huthi militia which is losing strength every day”.

 ?? SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP ?? Yemeni fighters loyal to the Saudi-backed Yemeni president stand on a road leading to the town of Khokha, retaken from ShiiteHuth­i rebels, about 120km south of the Huthi rebel-held Red Sea port of Hodeida, last year.
SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP Yemeni fighters loyal to the Saudi-backed Yemeni president stand on a road leading to the town of Khokha, retaken from ShiiteHuth­i rebels, about 120km south of the Huthi rebel-held Red Sea port of Hodeida, last year.

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