The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Global alarm grows over Hoseida

At least 150 killed in 24 hours in port city, lifeline to 14 mln Yemenis at risk of starvation

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HODEIDA, Yemen: At least 150 people have been killed in 24 hours of clashes in Yemen’s Hodeida, medics and military sources said yesterday, as internatio­nal pressure mounted for a ceasefire in the vital port city.

Government loyalists supported by a Saudi-led coalition are fighting to oust the Iran-backed Huthi rebels from the Red Sea city, whose docks are a lifeline to 14 million Yemenis at risk of starvation.

“If the port at Hodeida is destroyed, that could create an absolutely catastroph­ic situation,” UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned.

“The fighting must stop, a political debate must begin, and we must prepare a massive humanitari­an response to avoid the worst next year,” he said.

A source in the pro-government coalition said the insurgents had pushed back a large-scale assault aimed at moving towards the port.

Government forces, led on the ground by Emirati-backed troops, have made their way into Hodeida after 11 days of clashes, reaching residentia­l neighbourh­oods in the east on Sunday and sparking fears of street fights that would further endanger civilians trapped in the city.

Residents and government military sources have reported rebel snipers stationed on rooftops in civilian streets in eastern Hodeida, a few kilometres (miles) from the port on the western edge of the city.

Mariam Aldogani, Save the Children’s field coordinato­r in Yemen, said that the people in Hodeida are living in a “state of fear”.

“There is ongoing fighting, and the situation is very bad,” she told AFP over the weekend by phone, as strikes were heard in the background.

The Hodeida offensive has sparked internatio­nal outcry unpreceden­ted in nearly four years of conflict between the Huthis and the Saudi-backed government.

Both the United States and Britain are major suppliers of arms to Saudi Arabia.

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is to meet senior officials from Yemen and the crown prince of the United Arab Emirates, a key pillar of the Saudi-led coalition supporting the Yemeni government, on Monday.

“The human cost of war in Yemen is incalculab­le,” Hunt said ahead of his trip. “The only solution is now a political decision to set aside arms and pursue peace.”

Aid groups fear for the safety of nearly 600,000 people living in Hodeida -- and for millions of others dependent on its port for what little food and humanitari­an aid trickle into impoverish­ed, blockaded Yemen.

A military official in Hodeida yesterday confirmed seven civilians had died, without giving further details.

Medics in hospitals across Hodeida province reported 111 rebels and 32 loyalist fighters killed overnight, according to a tally by AFP.

Sources at the Al-Alfi military hospital, seized by the rebels during their 2014 takeover, said charred body parts had been delivered there overnight. Military sources confirmed that the Saudi-led alliance had targeted the rebels with multiple air strikes.

The rebels have begun to evacuate their wounded to Sanaa, the capital, which the Huthis seized during a 2014 takeover that included a string of ports on Yemen’s coastline.

Saudi Arabia and its allies intervened in the Yemeni government’s fight against the Huthis in 2015, triggering what the UN now calls the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

Nearly 600 people have been killed since clashes erupted in Hodeida on November 1, ending a temporary suspension in a government offensive to take the city that began in June.

The coalition has come under intense internatio­nal pressure to end the conflict in Yemen, particular­ly following the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The United Nations’ Yemen envoy, Martin Griffiths, is pushing for peace talks between the Huthis and the government by the end of the year.

The United States, which for years provided military training and aerial refuelling for the Saudi-led coalition, on Saturday announced it would end its inflight refuelling support for the alliance.

The coalition has been blackliste­d by the United Nations for the killing and maiming of children, particular­ly in air raids on rebel-held territory.

The alliance accuses Iran of smuggling arms to the Huthis through Hodeida port. Tehran denies the charges.

The World Health Organizati­on estimates nearly 10,000 people have been killed in the Yemen war since 2015. But rights groups believe the toll may be five times as high. – AFP

 ??  ?? A shipment of grain unloaded at the Red Sea port of Hodeidah in this file photo. — Reuters photo A nurse carries a Yemeni child suffering from severe malnutriti­on at a hospital in the northern district of Abs in Yemen’s Hajjah province. — AFP photo
A shipment of grain unloaded at the Red Sea port of Hodeidah in this file photo. — Reuters photo A nurse carries a Yemeni child suffering from severe malnutriti­on at a hospital in the northern district of Abs in Yemen’s Hajjah province. — AFP photo
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