Arab News

Yemeni govt forces make military gains in Jouf and Marib provinces

Environmen­tal damage in Red Sea feared as Houthis delay UN inspection of leaking tanker

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

Yemeni troops and allied tribesmen, backed by air cover from the Arab coalition, have seized control of a large territory in the northern province of Jouf, the first major territoria­l gains since the beginning of a Houthi offensive on Marib, local army officers told Arab News on Thursday.

The Defense Ministry announced recapturin­g Al-Jadafer, a large desert area in Jouf, putting government forces on the edges of provincial capital Hazem city and other strategic locations.

Maj. Gen. Amen Al-Waili, commander of the 6th Military Region, first announced the Jouf gains on Wednesday, saying the army was pushing toward new areas as the Houthis had suffered heavy setbacks and casualties.

“After this remarkable progress, the national army forces are (now) on the outskirts of Hazem,” Al-Waili was quoted as saying by state media. The Houthis seized Hazem and surroundin­g areas last March, paving the way for their fighters to push toward the oil- and gas-rich province of Marib.

But the army’s territoria­l gains in Jouf have boosted the morale of loyalists as well as alleviatin­g Houthi pressure on government troops in Marib. An officer in Marib, who prekilled

ferred to remain anonymous, told Arab News that they had pushed back Houthi attacks on Serwah and other contested areas.

Army troops and allied tribesmen on Thursday captured Zor, a small village in Serwah hosting displaceme­nt camps, and surroundin­g mountains and areas after clashes with rebels. Dozens of fighters were or wounded in the Murad area as army troops and tribesmen repelled their offensive, the Defense Ministry said.

Yemeni Informatio­n Minister Muammar Al-Iryani tweeted the latest gains in Marib, saying that troops were determined to recapture areas that had fallen to the Houthis.

“With their high morale and determinat­ion, the heroes are moving toward recapturin­g areas that the terrorist Houthi militia controlled during their latest escalation,” he said. Yemeni Foreign Minister Ahmed Awadh bin Mubarak told Arab News that he would visit the capitals of Gulf states to garner support for the government, explaining political developmen­ts and coordinati­ng positions with GCC officials. Separately, the UN said that new requests by the Houthis were further delaying its experts from examining a decaying tanker that is loaded with more than a million barrels of crude oil.

It warned last year that the tanker, the FSO Safer, had not been maintained for more than five years. Experts fear it could explode or leak, causing huge environmen­tal damage to marine life and also affect shipping in the Red Sea. UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the additional requests focused on “logistics and security arrangemen­ts,” and that it was “now difficult to say exactly when the mission could be deployed.”

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