The National - News

Houthi fighters die trying to break Yemeni government lines in Hodeidah province

- ALI MAHMOUD

Dozens of rebels were killed when fighting broke out in Yemen’s Hodeidah province on Sunday, with Iran-backed Houthi forces trying to break pro-government lines.

Shooting started despite a December 2018 ceasefire agreement reached at UN-backed peace talks.

Aseel Al Sakladi, a representa­tive of Al Amalika Forces, told The National that Houthi fighters attacked positions held by the pro-government Joint Forces from the western edge of Hays, south of Hodeidah, at about 5am local time on Sunday.

Pro-government forces control a sliver of the coast from Mocha to the outskirts of Hodeidah city.

If the Iran-backed rebels cut the line at Hays, they could encircle the city.

“Joint Forces destroyed three Houthi vehicles and killed dozens of their fighters, among them a field commander,” Mr Al Sakladi said.

The clashes took place a day after 23 Houthis and seven Joint Forces militiamen were killed in fighting near Ad Durayhimi city, 12 kilometres south of Hodeidah, a source from the Joint Forces said.

“They launched their offensive early on Saturday morning using heavy weapons including artillery and tanks,” the source said.

He said the pro-government lines held.

The fighting around Ad Durayhimi forced residents of villages near the front lines to flee their homes as mortars hit

Wadi Al Roman and Dakhnan to the east of the city.

The port at Hodeidah is a lifeline for food and aid to millions in north Yemen. The Houthis threatened to destroy the port when the government appeared ready to take the city in a long offensive in 2019.

It stopped to allow time for peace talks in Sweden.

Although a deal was brokered and both sides pulled back, the terms of the agreement have not been honoured.

The rebels have not handed over the city and its port to an independen­t local force. The UN has been unable to oversee the site, and the rebels have failed to fully withdraw from the province as agreed.

The latest Houthi offensive started days after the US announced a plan to designate the rebels as a terrorist outfit.

Elsewhere on Sunday, Houthi fighters died and others were injured when their roadside bomb exploded in Al Dhalea province in southern Yemen.

“The explosive device blew up on a group of Houthi fighters while they were preparing it in a mountainou­s dirt road near to their posts in northern Batar area,” Capt Fuad Jubari of Al Dhalea military region said.

“We heard the explosion and saw Houthi military cars rushing to transfer the injured.”

The latest shooting started despite a December 2018 ceasefire agreement at UN-backed negotiatio­ns

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