Toronto Star

Yemeni rebels welcome call for strike probe

UN wants investigat­ion into Saudi-led attack that killed dozens in north

- AHMED AL-HAJ AND MENNA ZAKI

SANAA, YEMEN — Yemen’s Shiite rebels on Friday backed a UN call for a probe into a Saudi-led coalition airstrike in the country’s north that killed dozens of people the previous day, including many children, in an attack that drew wide internatio­nal criticism.

Senior Yemeni rebel leader Mohammed Ali al-Houthi said on Twitter that the rebels — known as Houthis — welcome the call and are willing to cooperate in an investigat­ion of the strike in Saada province that hit a bus carrying civilians, many of them schoolchil­dren, in a busy market in Dahyan district.

The coalition said Friday it would investigat­e and a spokespers­on for the Saudi Embassy in Washington, Fatimah S. Baeshen, said in a statement the case was referred to the coalition’s investigat­ive body.

“The Coalition will, as it has always, exert all efforts to preserve civilian lives,” she said.

The coalition’s statement signalled a shift in its earlier stance when spokesman Col. Turki alMalki defended the attack as a “legitimate military action” and blamed the Houthis for recruiting children and using them in the battlefiel­ds as cover.

The coalition, which has been at war with the Houthis for more than three years, said the attack on Saada was in response to a missile fired by the rebels into the kingdom’s south a day earlier. The coalition said it had intercepte­d and destroyed the missile but its fragments killed one person and wounded11o­thers in Saudi’s southweste­rn border region of Jizan.

The Iran-aligned Houthis regularly fire into Saudi Arabia and have previously targeted its capital, Riyadh, with ballistic missiles.

They say their missile attacks on the kingdom are in retaliatio­n for air raids on Yemen by the Western-backed coalition. On Friday, the rebel-run Al Masirah TV reported that the Houthis fired ballistic missiles targeting military bases in Saudi Arabia’s southern provinces of Asir and Jizan. The Saudiowned Al Arabiya satellite news channel reported that the coalition had intercepte­d two missiles fired toward Jizan.

The United Nations said an exact death toll has yet to be confirmed but initial reports point to more than 60 casualties, with dozens severely wounded.

Al-Masirah reported at least 51 people, including 40 children, were killed and 79 others, including 56 children, were wounded in the airstrike, citing the Yemeni Health Ministry in the capital, Sanaa, which is under rebel control.

It also said three children have gone missing since the airstrike.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said its team received the bodies of 29 children, all under 15 years old, and treated 48 wounded, 30 of them children.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Yemenis dig graves for children killed on Thursday when their bus was hit during a Saudi-led coalition airstrike in rebel-held northern Yemen.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Yemenis dig graves for children killed on Thursday when their bus was hit during a Saudi-led coalition airstrike in rebel-held northern Yemen.

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