The Philippine Star

Over 150 killed in weekend violence around Yemen’s Hodeida

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SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Fighting has escalated around Yemen’s key port city of Hodeida, with more than 150 combatants killed over the weekend from both the rebel and government­backed sides, officials saidyester­day.

Airstrikes and naval artillery pounded rebel positions around the Red Sea costal city, where government backed-troops are launching a major ground assault in an attempt to wrest it from dug-in rebels. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Fierce fighting also erupted in the provinces of Bayda, to the south, and Saada, a Houthi stronghold in the north, they added.

Yemen has been at war since March 2015 when the rebels, known as Houthis, occupied northern regions and forced the government into exile.

Since then, a Saudi-led US-backed coalition supporting the largely exiled government has blockaded the rebelheld north and waged a devastatin­g air campaign, causing thousands of deaths.

The US has sold billions of dollars’ worth of arms to Saudi Arabia and provides logistical and other support to the coalition, while the coalition, which backs the exiled government, accuses the Houthis of acting as Iran’s proxy.

The war has led to a humanitari­an crisis that is one of the worst in the world, with three quarters of Yemen’s population requiring some form of life-saving assistance and protection, according to the UN Population Fund.

An estimated 10,000 people have been killed and more than eight million are at risk of starvation from a looming famine, including two million mothers who are risking death.

The UN Children’s Fund regional director said over the weekend that Yemeni authoritie­s — both from the pro-government and rebel side — are making it “impossible” to deliver and distribute much-needed humanitari­an aid to the country.

On Sunday, Geert Cappelaere called the situation a “living” for all Yemeni children, noting the death of a child whose emaciated body gained attention on the front page of the New York

Times last week.

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