Gulf News

Al Houthis warned of ‘painful’ response

UN TO LAUNCH NEW YEMEN PEACE ROADMAP IN TWO MONTHS

- BY SAEED AL BATATI Correspond­ent

The Saudi-led coalition battling to uphold the legitimacy of Yemen’s government against the Al Houthi militia warned on Monday of a “painful” response if the militia mounted new attacks on Saudi Arabia using what it said were Iran-supplied drones.

“If Al Houthis continue targeting industrial or residentia­l facilities, the response will be hard and painful,” said coalition spokesman Turki Al Maliki, displaying what he said were remnants of the suicide drones.

Al Maliki told reporters in the eastern city of Al Khobar

that the airport of militiahel­d capital Sana’a was used as a military base to orchestrat­e the drone strikes.

Separately in an interview with Al Ain 4U, he said the firing of ballistic missiles towards Saudi Arabia is a clear indication that Al Houthis are under heavy pressure now. “They are resorting to firing missiles just to elevate the morale of their fighters. They are breathing their last,” he said.

Meanwhile, the United Nations’ new peace envoy for Yemen said he will present a plan within two months to re-launch negotiatio­ns to end the war but warned that missile strikes on Saudi Arabia risked derailing the effort.

Addressing the Security Council, Martin Griffiths said a possible sharp escalation from the missile attacks on Saudi Arabia and intensifie­d fighting could “in a stroke, take peace off the table.”

Two civilians were killed and a woman wounded in Hodeida’s Hays town in western Yemen when a mortar shell fired by the Iran-backed Al Houthis hit their house, residents and local media reports said.

Al Houthi militiamen, who still control mountainou­s areas and farms outside Hays, shelled the government-controlled town on Sunday. A mortar landed on the house of Ali Mohammad Shehab, killing his wife, 60, and his granddaugh­ter, 16, and injured another woman, Al Masdar Online, an independen­t news site, reported.

Government forces, backed by the Saudi-led coalition, seized control of Hays and neighbouri­ng areas in February and pushed deeper into Al Houthis’ shrinking territorie­s in Hodeida province.

Hundreds of displaced people who left their homes during the fighting returned to the town when loyalists declared victory and cleared landmines.

But local military commanders say Al Houthis repeatedly sneak into dense farms outside Hays to shell the town.

On Saturday, a mortar round fired by Al Houthis hit a residentia­l area in Hays, killing four civilians and injuring nine others. The town will remain vulnerable to Al Houthi shelling until government forces oust them from neighbouri­ng Al Jarrahi and mountainou­s locations, military analysts say.

Landmines claim lives

Thousands of landmines have also obstructed local people’s movements, and claimed the lives of several civilians since early last week. Dozens of civilians have been killed in Khokha and Mokha towns by mortar rounds and Katyusha rockets fired from Al Houthicont­rolled areas in Hodeida.

Meanwhile, in the central province of Baydha, government forces captured and killed dozens of militants in the region of Qanea, on the borders of Baydha and Marib province. Brigadier Ahmad Ma’ouda said the bodies of tens of Al Houthi militants have been abandoned on rugged mountain ranges liberated by government forces as army sappers started to clear mines planted by Al Houthis.

Speaking from liberated areas in Qanea, Ma’ouda said victories in Baydha would enable government forces to advance quickly to the other Al Houthi-controlled areas, such as Sana’a, as the province borders Marib, Shabwa, Abyan, Sana’a, Dhamar, Ibb and Dhale.

In the northern province of Jawf, Yemen’s Defence Ministry said on Monday that heavy fighting had broken out between government forces and Al Houthis in Al Masloub and Baret districts as fighter jets from the Saudi-led coalition struck Al Houthis’ military sites and gatherings. In Saada province, Al Houthis’ heartland, government forces battled the militia in Ketaf and Bouqa and Al Dhaher districts on Monday.

Government forces have seized control of almost 80 per cent of Yemeni land.

The town will remain vulnerable to Al Houthi shelling until government forces oust them from neighbouri­ng Al Jarrahi and mountainou­s locations.

 ?? AP ?? The wreckage of suicide drones displayed at a press conference in Al Khobar city on Monday. ■
AP The wreckage of suicide drones displayed at a press conference in Al Khobar city on Monday. ■

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