Times Colonist

Clashes continue between factions in Yemen

- AHMED Al-HAJ

SANAA, Yemen — Violent clashes between rival factions in Yemen’s rebel-held capital continued Saturday for the fourth straight day as forces loyal to a former president and Iranbacked Shiite rebels known as Houthis faced off in the streets of Sanaa, signalling disintegra­tion in the rebel alliance at war with a Saudi-led coalition for nearly three years.

Fighting since Wednesday intensifie­d, according to accounts of residents who said that loud explosions were heard overnight across the city and into Saturday morning. Mediation efforts by tribal elders and officials over the past few days have come to no avail.

“It’s been like a street war,” they said, adding that ambulances have been ferrying the wounded to hospitals. They spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals. There has been no official word on casualties, but the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said dozens were killed and hundreds wounded.

Over the course of the day, both sides claimed control of sensitive areas in the capital, including the airport, but nothing was confirmed.

Amid the escalating violence, ex-President Ali Abdullah Saleh announced in a televised interview on Saturday with Yemen al-Youm that he is open to dialogue and is willing to open a “new page” to deal with the Saudi coalition after ending its blockade and ceasing fire.

The U.S.-backed Saudi-led coalition has been fighting to defeat the Iranbacked Houthis along with Saleh’s forces in Yemen since March 2015. The coalition had also imposed a blockade on the country, allowing occasional humanitari­an access, with the aim of reinstatin­g the internatio­nally recognized government of Saleh’s successor, Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

The UN urged the coalition in a statement Saturday to “fully lift” the blockade on Yemen’s red sea ports saying that partial lifting only “slows the collapse toward a massive humanitari­an tragedy costing millions of lives.”

Saleh, who led Yemen for more than 30 years, was deposed after 2011 Arab Spring uprisings that swept the Middle East. The country has since fallen into chaos and Saleh later joined the Houthis to drive Hadi out of the capital in 2014.

In his address, he also blamed Houthis for laying siege to the homes of several officials in the General People’s Congress, which he leads, and “storming” a mosque named after him. Broadcasti­ng of Yemen al-Youm was stopped shortly after.

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