Arab News

Yemen security forces bust Iran-backed Houthi cell in Shabwa

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

Yemen’s security forces in the southern province of Shabwa have busted an Iran-backed Houthi cell responsibl­e for deadly attacks on security and military personnel in the area.

The country’s official news agency SABA reported that the security forces discovered a “terrorist” operation that had planted several roadside bombs and other explosive devices in the province’s capital.

Also uncovered, was a plot to assassinat­e Shabwa’s governor, officers of the Coalition for the

Restoratio­n of Legitimacy in Yemen, and other security and military officers.

In October, members of the cell detonated an improvised explosive device that ripped through a military vehicle staffed by Giants Brigades personnel, as well as a roadside bomb that exploded by a car belonging to a former Shabwa security commander, killing his son, and injuring three others.

Yemeni authoritie­s have so far not disclosed the number of members of the cell or how it was discovered.

The energy-rich province of Shabwa, which is controlled by

the Yemeni government, has seen a series of drive-by shootings and explosions that have killed numerous government personnel and generated fear in the province’s capital, Attaq.

Shabwa Gov. Awadh Al-Wazer has escaped several murder attempts since taking over the province in December last year.

The Houthis suffered a huge blow earlier this year when the Giants Bridges evicted them from the Bayhan, Ouselan, and Ain areas of Shabwa, which led to the province becoming Houthi-free.

Security officials said that the Houthis had surreptiti­ously dispatched agents to Shabwa and other freed areas to destabiliz­e security and assassinat­e government leaders.

Meanwhile, Yemeni army officials in the southern city of Taiz said the Houthis had continued their shelling and attacks on government-controlled areas of the heavily populated city on Tuesday night, sparking combat that lasted until Wednesday morning.

Government troops exchanged heavy machine-gun and artillery fire with the Houthis stationed on the city’s eastern, western, and northern edges.

A UN-brokered truce, which went into force on April 2, resulted in a dramatic reduction in hostilitie­s throughout the country, as well as the departure of commercial aircraft from Sanaa airport and the docking of fuel ships at Hodeidah Port.

However, people in Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city, which has been under a Houthi siege since early 2015, say that the militias have neither ceased their deadly and arbitrary shelling of civilian areas nor reduced their blockade.

Also, in Taiz, the internatio­nal organizati­on Save the Children said on Tuesday that a threeyear-old boy and his father had died, and four other people were injured on Sunday after a shell burst in a residentia­l neighborho­od, bringing the number of child deaths in October to 11.

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