Arab News

Five civilians killed in Hodeidah as fighting rages in Marib

- Saad Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

The UN mission in Yemen’s western province of Hodeidah said on Sunday that five civilians were killed and three more wounded on Saturday night, when an explosion ripped through their house in Hodeidah’s Al-Hawak district.

“Last night, an explosion occurred in a residentia­l area in Hodeidah’s Al-Hawak district, reportedly resulting in the deaths of up to five civilians with injuries to a further three,” the UN Mission to support the Hodeidah Agreement (UNMHA) said in a Twitter post, urging warring factions in Yemen to avoid targeting civilians. “UNMHA strongly condemns such acts of violence that breach the Hodeidah Agreement, and demands that the parties refrain from hitting residentia­l areas and causing more suffering to a population in an already dire situation.” Sharing graphic images of the dead, a local government official told Arab

News that a mortar shell fired by the Houthis exploded inside the house of Saber Ameen Al-Futaini, killing him and a number of his family in the Houthi-controlled Rabaseh neighborho­od.

“The Houthis committed this crime. They have committed many similar crimes in the past,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.

Last month, five women were killed in the same district when a projectile exploded at a wedding held on New Year’s Day in Hodeidah. In December, a missile attack by the Houthis killed 10 workers in an industrial complex in the Red Sea port city, sparking outrage inside and outside Yemen.

On Sunday, the Joint Forces, an umbrella term for three major military units in the country’s western coast, said that they traded heavy machine-gun fire with the Houthis in the city.

Dozens were injured on Sunday as Bangladesh­i police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at opposition activists to prevent new protests over the death of a writer in jail, police and a party official said. Live footage from local television station Channel 24 showed a road and footpath in front of the National Press Club — a favorite protest site in Dhaka — turning into a battlegrou­nd as police beat protesters with batons to disperse them.

Clashes ensued as student activists from the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party (BNP) hurled rocks and attacked officers with plastic pipes, prompting police to retaliate by “firing rubber bullets and tear gas,” said Deputy Commission­er of Dhaka police Sazzadur Rahma.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia