Oman Daily Observer

Arab coalition says Yemen rebels breach truce

VIOLATIONS MAR TRUCE:

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ADEN: The Saudi-led coalition accused Yemeni rebels of repeatedly breaching a ceasefire on Thursday, the first day of a truce under global pressure to end a war which has killed thousands.

At least 11 people were killed in sporadic clashes between rebels and pro-government forces, despite all sides insisting they will pause the fighting.

The truce, for an initial period of three days, took effect just before midnight on Wednesday to allow sorely needed aid deliveries in Yemen where the conflict has also left millions homeless and hungry.

The Saudi-led Arab coalition intervened in March 2015 to support the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi after Houthi rebels overran much of the country on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula.

Five previous truce attempts failed but cautious optimism preceded the current pause after intensifie­d internatio­nal pressure following an escalation of combat.

But Major General Ahmed Assiri, the coalition spokesman, said, “there is no ceasefire at all” because of repeated rebel breaches.

“This is the same situation as the previous time when we called for a ceasefire,” Assiri said.

And Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister told reporters in Washington that rebels were stepping up their attacks.

“As of this morning Washington time there had been more than 150 violations by the Houthi-Saleh side,” Adel al Jubeir said, referring to the rebels and forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The coalition and Hadi both vowed to abide by the ceasefire despite alleged violations by the rebels.

Pro-government forces declared “respect for the truce” but reserved the right to respond to infraction­s.

The rebels said they would respect the ceasefire as long as “the enemy” abides by it, but urged their fighters to be ready to retaliate against “all aggression”.

The coalition says it will continue an air and maritime embargo, to prevent weapons shipments to the rebels, and maintains airborne reconnaiss­ance.

At dawn, coalition aircraft flew twice over the rebel-held capital Sanaa without conducting raids, according to residents, who said they have had enough of failed ceasefires.

“They’re mocking us with a threeday truce,” said Ali al Doush, a 32-yearold civil servant who has not been paid for three months. “We want an end to the war.”

The deaths on Thursday included three civilians killed in a coalition air raid on Saada province, a historic Houthi stronghold, rebel-controlled media said.

Assiri denied that any air strikes took place over Yemen, although coalition warplanes carried out surveillan­ce.

He said a Patriot missile shot down a missile fired by rebels in Marib, east of the capital Sanaa.

A man and his daughter were wounded in a cross-border attack from Yemen in the kingdom’s Jazan region, Saudi civil defence authoritie­s said.

Assiri said coalition artillery aircraft retaliated.

“We will respond to each violation. We will be reactive,” he said. “It’s so easy. If they stop, we will not fire a bullet.”

Official Saudi media said there were more than 43 rebel violations along the border. Military sources and residents said there had also been fighting around and the besieged third city Taez, and proHadi positions came under fire in Sarwah, east of Sanaa.

The last ceasefire attempt began in April and collapsed as UN-brokered peace talks broke down in August.

Fighting then escalated, until an October 8 coalition air strike which the UN said killed more than 140 people and wounded at least 525 at a funeral in Sanaa.

On Thursday a panel of UN experts concluded the strike was in violation of internatio­nal humanitari­an law, accusing the coalition of failing to take “effective and adequate precaution­ary measures to minimise civilian casualties”.

In the wake of the incident the US announced an “immediate review” of its intelligen­ce and refuelling assistance to the coalition, whose investigat­ive team said the funeral was “wrongly targeted”.

The US Navy also for the first time struck rebels directly earlier this month, hitting radar sites which Washington said were involved in missile launches against a US warship and other vessels.

The ceasefire does not apply to jihadists who have exploited the conflict to gain ground in the south.

Suspected Al Qaeda militants on Thursday killed four soldiers at a checkpoint in the southern province of Abyan, a security official said. One attacker was killed and another wounded.

AHMED ASSIRI Major General

 ?? — AFP ?? Yemeni children fill empty jerrycans with water from a donated source amid ongoing widespread disruption of water supplies in the coastal village on the outskirts of the Yemeni port city of Hodeidah.
— AFP Yemeni children fill empty jerrycans with water from a donated source amid ongoing widespread disruption of water supplies in the coastal village on the outskirts of the Yemeni port city of Hodeidah.

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