Ottawa Citizen

Saudi airstrikes rattle Yemen

Slain leader’s son calls for ‘blood’ to be avenged

- AHMED AL-HAJ AND MAGGIE MICHAEL

• Heavy airstrikes by the Saudi Arabialed coalition rocked Yemen’s capital on Tuesday, striking Sanaa’s densely populated neighbourh­oods in apparent retaliatio­n for the killing of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh by the Shiite rebels who control the city.

Residents reported heavy bombing, and a United Nations official said at least 25 airstrikes hit the capital over the past 24 hours. The Saudiled coalition battling the rebels had thrown its support behind Saleh just hours before his death, as the longtime strongman’s alliance with the rebels unravelled.

Saleh’s body, which had appeared in a video by the militias with a gaping head wound, was taken to a rebelcontr­olled military hospital. A rebel leader, speaking to a mass rally in Sanaa, said Saleh’s wounded sons had been hospitaliz­ed, without providing further details.

The gruesome images sent shock waves among Saleh’s followers. Saleh’s son Salah said on Facebook Tuesday that he won’t receive condolence­s for his father’s death until “after avenging the blood” of the former leader. Salah also urged his father’s followers to fight their former allies, the Shiite rebels known as Houthis. Meanwhile, Arab League chief Ahmed AboulGheit denounced Saleh’s “assassinat­ion” at the hands of “criminal militias,” and warned of a further escalation of the war and Yemen’s humanitari­an crisis. A spokesman quoted AboulGheit as saying the internatio­nal community should label the Houthis a “terrorist” organizati­on.

“All means should be tackled for the Yemeni people to get rid of this black nightmare,” he said.

Iran, which supports the Houthis but denies arming them, welcomed Saleh’s killing, saying it had put an end to a Saudi conspiracy. “He got what he deserved,” Ali Akbar Velayati, an aide to Iran’s supreme leader, was quoted as saying by the semioffici­al Tasnim news agency.

Saleh’s slaying likely gives the rebels the upper hand in the clashes in Sanaa, which ended after his death, while also dashing the hopes of Yemen’s Saudi-backed government that the former president’s recent split with the Iranian-allied Houthis would have weakened them.

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