Gulf News

Yemen troops surround Hodeida

SOLDIERS INCH CLOSER TO VITAL PORT AS DOZENS OF AL HOUTHIS SURRENDER

- BY RAMADAN AL SHERBINI Correspond­ent

Soldiers now closer to vital port as dozens of Al Houthi militiamen surrender |

Yemeni government forces, supported by an Arab coalition, yesterday inched closer to the country’s main port in Hodeida as part of a major campaign to liberate the western city from Iran-allied Al Houthi extremists, military sources said.

The Yemeni army said that government loyalists are coming closer to the Hodeida port through which most of the country’s humanitari­an aid and imports enter.

Dozens of Al Houthi militiamen surrendere­d to the advancing forces and laid down their arms, Dubai-based television Al Arabiya reported.

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.

On Thursday, the Yemeni army, backed by the Saudi-led alliance’s air power, started a key operation aimed at expelling Al Houthis from the Red Sea city of Hodeida, which has been under the militants’ control since late 2014.

Northern exit open

The government forces said they are encircling Hodeida from the southern, western and eastern directions, leaving the northern exit for Al Houthis to flee.

The pro-government forces, Al Amalika (Giants) meanwhile reported yesterday that they are besieging Al Houthi snipers perching on rooftops in the eastern district of Al Saleh.

A militant arms depot exploded near Hodeida, Al Arabiya reported without further details. The latest escalation comes amid mounting internatio­nal calls for Yemen’s warring sides to observe a ceasefire and relaunch peace talks to end the conflict of more than three years.

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 and Hodeida.

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