The Borneo Post

8 women, 1 child killed in air raid near Yemen capital

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SANAA: Eight women and a child were killed in an overnight air raid on a funeral reception near the Yemeni capital Sanaa, medics said yesterday.

At least 10 more women were reported wounded in the raid, which hit the women’s reception area at a funeral in Arhab district, 40 kilometres north of Sanaa.

Medics dispatched to the incident identified the bombing site as the residence of Mohammed al-Nakii in the village of Shiraa.

Huthi rebels, who control the capital, accused a Saudi- backed coalition of carrying out the strike.

A coalition spokespers­on was not immediatel­y available for comment.

A post on the Huthi-run saba. ye news website late Wednesday gave an initial toll of six women killed and 10 wounded. Casualties were transporte­d to hospitals in Sanaa.

Yemen’s war pits the internatio­nally recognised government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi against Iran- backed Huthis, allied with forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The conflict spiralled in March 2015 when the coalition began targeting the Shiite rebels, who had seized control of Sanaa.

The United Nations says more than 7,400 people, including around 1,400 children, have been killed since then in the fight for territoria­l control across the country.

The Arab coalition has faced repeated allegation­s of targeting weddings, funerals, schools and hospitals in Yemen.

The coalition maintains it does not deliberate­ly target civilians.

But in October it admitted to killing 140 people in an air strike on a funeral in Sanaa, blaming the deaths on ‘incorrect informatio­n’ after initially denying involvemen­t. — AFP

 ??  ?? Two Yemeni men sit and talk by the ledge of a bridge as another woman and two girls pass by next to them, with the UNESCO-listed buildings of the old city of the Yemeni capital Sanaa in background behind them. — AFP photo
Two Yemeni men sit and talk by the ledge of a bridge as another woman and two girls pass by next to them, with the UNESCO-listed buildings of the old city of the Yemeni capital Sanaa in background behind them. — AFP photo

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