Gulf News

Coalition hits air base used by Al Houthis

MILITIA WAS USING BASE TO LAUNCH DRONE AND BALLISTIC MISSILE ATTACKS

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The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen said it attacked Sana’a Internatio­nal Airport and an adjoining air base being used by the Iran-backed Al Houthi insurgents, as the two warring sides also clashed further west in the country’s main port city.

The violence broke out days after renewed US calls for a ceasefire in the threeand-half-year war that the Saudi-backed government suggested it was ready to support.

Al Houthi forces were using the air base in the capital to launch drone and ballistic missile attacks, a coalition spokesman told Saudi state Al Ekhbaria TV yesterday.

Flights and internatio­nal aid efforts were not affected, Colonel Turki Al Malek said.

Al Masirah TV, which is controlled by Al Houthis, said more than 30 air strikes targeted Al Dulaimi Air Base in Sana’a and the surroundin­g areas.

The assault followed reports last week of the coalition sending more than 10,000 reinforcem­ents toward Hodeida via a southweste­rn coastal route.

“Fierce battles between forces backed by Saudi-led coalition and the #Houthis have been going on for hours in the southern and eastern outlets of the Red Sea port city of #Hodeida, with huge blasts being heard and airstrikes,” Yemeni journalist Mohammad Al Qadhi wrote in a tweet yesterday morning.

Port clash

In the port of Hodeida, fighting broke out early yesterday in a southern district, residents and military sources said.

The sources in Hodeida said fighting was heard in areas near the airport and the university, and Apache helicopter­s were spotted in the sky.

Forces loyal to the Saudibacke­d government have said coalition strikes were intensifie­d on Thursday night on Al Houthi bases near the eastern entrance to the port city, which is a gateway to the capital, and in its southern part.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE and their allies have been fighting since March 2015 against Al Houthis, who drove the country’s internatio­nally recognised government into exile in 2014.

The militia controls much of north Yemen, including the capital Sana’a.

The war has devastated the country’s infrastruc­ture and driven much of its population to the brink of famine.

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