Gulf News

53 Al Houthis killed in fierce Hodeida battle

HADI VOWS NOT TO STOP TILL SANA’A IS LIBERATED FROM MILITIA ‘THAT IS NEAR COLLAPSE’

- BY RAMADAN AL SHERBINI Correspond­ent

Hadi vows not to stop till Sana’a is liberated from Iran-backed militia ‘that is near collapse’ |

Fifty-three Al Houthi militiamen have been killed and dozens more injured in battles and air strikes in Hodeida, medics said yesterday, as progovernm­ent forces advanced in the insurgent-held Red Sea port city.

Yemeni government forces, supported by an Arab coalition, were yesterday engaged in pitched battles against the Iran-aligned militants. The port is strategica­lly important because most of Yemen’s aid and imports enter through it.

The current fight is raging just 3km from the harbour, Al Arabiya quoted sources as saying. According to a pro-government military source, clashes intensifie­d in Hodeida and centred around its university on Saturday and yesterday morning.

On Thursday, the Yemeni army, backed by the Saudi-led alliance’s air power, started a major operation aimed at expelling Al Houthis from Hodeida. Thirteen pro-government troops were killed, medical sources in Aden and Mokha, where the fighters were transporte­d, told AFP.

The government forces have since reported advances in pushing into the western city.

A pro-government force, calling itself The Giants’ Battalions said yesterday they had seized a main road near the strategic Kilo 16, considered the main gateway to Hodeida.

Adding they were fighting hard against Al Houthis at the southern approach to the city, ■ they were able to retake the engineerin­g school building, part of the Hodeida University compound located in the city’s south-western parts.

Brigadier Abdul Rahman Saleh, in charge of the Hodeida campaign, said government forces yesterday moved beyond the Kilo 16 area in the direction of the eastern district of Al Saleh.

‘Victory is imminent’

Al Houthi militia is in a state of collapse due to “the successive defeats” it suffered at the hands of the army and resistance fighters, Al Saleh added, according to Yemen’s official news agency Saba. The government and Arab coalition accuse Al Houthis of taking advantage of their control of the Hodeida port to obtain weapons from their Iranian patrons as well as confiscate aid intended for Yemenis in order to sustain their war efforts.

Al Houthis have plunged Yemen into devastatin­g unrest since late 2014, when they deposed the internatio­nally recognised government and overran parts of the country including the capital Sana’a.

In 2015, the Arab coalition, led by the UAE and Saudi Arabia, intervened in the country in response to a request from its government.

Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi vowed that the ongoing military campaign would not rest until Sana’a is liberated from the extremists.

“The flag of the coup plotters will fall and the flag of the Yemeni Republic will be hoisted at the Maran mountains,” Hadi added, referring to a militant stronghold in the northern province of Saada, where government forces have also reported progress.

“Victory is imminent,” Saba quoted Hadi as saying.

The latest escalation in fighting comes amid internatio­nal calls for warring sides in Yemen to end the conflict.

The government has said it is ready to consider confidence­building measures, while the rebels remain unrelentin­g.

On Thursday, the Yemeni army, backed by the Saudi-led alliance’s air power, started a major operation aimed at expelling Al Houthis from Hodeida. Government forces have since reported advances into the city.

 ?? Courtesy: Coalition Media Centre ?? Pro-government forces, known as The Giants’ Battalions, moved into Hodeida yesterday, after reportedly seizing a main road near the strategic Kilo 16 mark.
Courtesy: Coalition Media Centre Pro-government forces, known as The Giants’ Battalions, moved into Hodeida yesterday, after reportedly seizing a main road near the strategic Kilo 16 mark.

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