Bangkok Post

Houthi rebels kill dozens of Yemeni troops

Military camp hit in missile, drone strike

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SANAA: More than 80 soldiers were killed and scores injured in missile and drone attacks blamed on Houthi rebels, on a mosque in the central province of Marib, medical and military sources said yesterday.

Saturday’s strike follows months of relative calm in the war between the Iran-backed Houthi and Yemen’s internatio­nally recognised government which is backed by a Saudi-led military coalition.

The Houthi attacked a mosque in a military camp in Marib — about 170 kilometres east of the capital Sanaa — during evening prayers, military sources said.

A medical source at a Marib city hospital, where the casualties were transporte­d, said that at least 83 soldiers were killed and more than 148 injured in the strike.

The attack came a day after coalitionb­acked government forces launched a operation against the Houthis in the Naham region, north of Sanaa.

Fighting in Naham was ongoing yesterday, a military source said according to the official Saba news agency.

“Dozens from the (Houthi) militia were killed and injured,” the source added.

Yemeni President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi condemned the “cowardly and terrorist” attack on the mosque, Saba reported.

“The disgracefu­l actions of the Houthi militia without a doubt confirm its unwillingn­ess to (achieve) peace, because it knows nothing but death and destructio­n and is a cheap Iranian tool in the region,” it quoted Mr Hadi as saying.

The Houthis did not make any immediate claim of responsibi­lity and the Saba report did not give a death toll.

The uptick in violence comes shortly after United Nations envoy Martin Griffiths welcomed a sharp reduction in airstrikes and the movement of ground forces.

“We are surely, and I hope this is true and I hope it will remain so, witnessing one of the quietest periods of this conflict,” he said in a briefing to the UN Security Council on Thursday.

“Experience, however, tells us that military de-escalation cannot be sustained without political progress between the parties, and this has become the next challenge.”

A year after Yemen’s warring sides agreed to a UN-brokered truce for the key Red Sea port city of Hodeida and its surroundin­gs, fighting in the province has subsided but the slow implementa­tion of the deal has quashed hopes for an end to the conflict.

The landmark agreement signed in Sweden in December 2018 had been hailed as Yemen’s best chance so far to end the fighting that has pushed the country to the brink of famine.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have been killed and millions displaced in the war that has ravaged the country, triggering what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

Saudi Arabia and its allies intervened in the conflict to back the government against the Houthis in March 2015, shortly after the rebels seized Sanaa.

A senior UN official warned Thursday that certain key factors that threatened to trigger a famine in Yemen last year were once again looming large, including a plunge in the value of the national currency.

“With a rapidly depreciati­ng rial and disrupted salary payments, we are again seeing some of the key conditions that brought Yemen to the brink of famine a year ago,” Ramesh Rajasingha­m, who coordinate­s humanitari­an aid in Yemen, told the UN Security Council.

“We must not let that happen again,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Officers and soldiers pray at the funeral of a Yemeni army officer killed in the southern province of Abyan, Yemen last year.
REUTERS Officers and soldiers pray at the funeral of a Yemeni army officer killed in the southern province of Abyan, Yemen last year.

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