Weekend Herald

Houthis welcome UN call for probe after deadly airstrike

Guterres wants answers after Saudi-led coalition’s strike kills dozens, children

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Yemen’s Shia rebels are backing a United Nations call for a probe into a Saudi-led coalition airstrike in the country’s north that killed dozens of people on Thursday, including many children.

Yesterday’s tweet by senior Yemeni rebel leader Mohammed Ali al-Houthi says the rebels — known as Houthis — welcome the call and are willing to co-operate in an investigat­ion of the airstrike in Saada province that hit a bus carrying civilians, including children, in a busy market.

In a statement after the attack yesterday, UN chief Antonio Guterres urged Yemen’s warring parties to take “constant care to spare civilians and civilian objects in the conduct of military operations”. Guterres also called for an “independen­t and prompt investigat­ion”.

The rebels say the airstrike killed more than 50 and wounded 77.

The Saudi-led coalition, meanwhile, said it targeted the Houthis, who it said had fired a missile at the kingdom’s south on Wednesday, killing one person who was a Yemeni resident in the area.

The coalition backs the nationally recognised Government and has been at war with the Houthis since March 2015. The rebels control much of northern Yemen, including the capital, Sanaa.

Al Masirah TV aired dramatic images of wounded children, their clothes and schoolbags covered with blood as they lay on hospital stretchers.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said on Twitter that its team at an ICRC-supported hospital in Saada received the bodies of 29 children, all under 15 years old. It also received 48 wounded people, including 30 children, it said.

The attack took place in the Dahyan market in Saada province, a Houthi stronghold.

Guterres condemned the coalition airstrike and called on all parties to spare civilians and “to respect their obligation­s under internatio­nal humanitari­an law, in particular the fundamenta­l rules of distinctio­n, proportion­ality and precaution­s in attack”, UN deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

In the hours after the Thursday attack, airstrikes hit Sanaa, and sounds of the blasts reverberat­ed across the city’s southern and western neighbourh­oods.

It was not immediatel­y clear if there were any casualties in those strikes.

Yemen’s stalemated, three-year war has killed more than 10,000 people, badly damaged Yemen’s infrastruc­ture and crippled its health system. The coalition faces widespread internatio­nal criticism for its airstrikes in Yemen that kill civilians.

Impoverish­ed Yemen, on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, is now in the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis, with more than 22.2 million people in need of assistance.

Last week, Yemeni medical officials said the coalition conducted airstrikes in the rebel-held port city of Hodeida, killing at least 28 people and wounding 70.

But the coalition denied carrying out any attacks in the city, saying it follows a “strict and transparen­t approach based on the rules internatio­nal law”.

The fight for the port of Hodeida, a key lifeline for supplies and aid for Yemen’s population on the brink of starvation, has become the latest battlegrou­nd in the devastatin­g war.

The Iran-aligned Houthis regularly fire into Saudi Arabia and have targeted its capital, Riyadh, with ballistic missiles. They say their missile attacks on the kingdom are in retaliatio­n for air raids on Yemen by the Western-backed coalition.

 ??  ?? Antonio Guterres
Antonio Guterres

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