ENORMOUS explosions ripped through suburban Yemen overnight as Saudi-led forces continued intensive air strikes to repel a rebel advance on the Gulf state’s capital.
As night fell yesterday, intense explosions could be heard throughout the rebel-held capital Sanaa, where warplanes had carried out strikes since the early morning. Military officials from both sides of the conflict said that air strikes were targeting areas east and south of the third largest city of Taiz, as well as its airport, while naval artillery and air strikes hit coastal areas east of Aden.
“It’s like an earthquake,” Sanaa resident Ammar Ahmed said by telephone. “Never in my life have I heard such explosions or heard such raids.”
He said he could hear missiles whistling through the air and see flames rising from a military area in the southern neighbourhood of Faj Attan, where Scud missiles are believed to be stored.
Saudi Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri, the coalition spokesman, told reporters in Riyadh that naval forces are blocking the movement of ships to prevent weapons and fighters from entering or leaving Yemen. He said they had not yet intercepted anything.
Hard target ... Smoke and flames rise
from an alleged weapons storage depot at a Shiite Huthi rebel camp
after an air strike by the Saudi-led alliance in the Yemeni capital
Sanaa. Source: AFP
Source: AFP
The air strikes have targeted at least nine of Yemen’s 21 provinces and have prevented the Houthis from reaching Aden, the former capital of the once-independent south, where President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi declared a temporary capital after fleeing rebel-controlled Sanaa.
Hadi, who was a close US ally against a powerful local al-Qaeda affiliate, fled the country last week, but remains Yemen’s internationally recognised leader. The US has provided support to the Saudi-led coalition but is not carrying out direct military action.
On the move ... An armoured vehicle
flying the flag of the southern separatist movement is seen in the
southern Yemeni city of Aden. Source: AFP
Source: AFP
ESCALATING CONFLICT
The conflict marks a major escalation in the regional struggle for influence between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which also back rival sides in Syria’s civil war. Arab leaders unveiled plans Sunday to form a joint military intervention force, which could raise tensions further.Asiri said much of the air strikes on Sunday and Monday focused on slowing the Houthi advance on Aden. He said the Houthis tried to fire ballistic missiles yesterday but that they malfunctioned. Warplanes then struck the force that had tried to launch them, he said, without providing further details.
The Houthis’ TV network said the coalition bombed a displaced persons camp in the northern rebel stronghold of Saada, killing 40 people. Doctors Without Borders tweeted that 29 people from a displaced persons camp were dead on arrival at a hospital it supports and that it treated two dozen injured, among them women and children.
However, witnesses told The Associated Press that the camp — used to house people displaced by an earlier conflict that ended five years ago — is now occupied by Houthi forces and that most of those killed were fighters.
When asked about the allegations, Asiri said the Houthi fighters operate among civilians. It was not immediately possible to resolve the conflicting accounts.
On the run ... A Yemeni man carries
kitchen utensils as he walks on a main road with smoke rising in the
background from a strike allegedly targeting Huthi rebels on the
outskirts in Yemen's second city of Aden. Source: AFP
Source: AFP
HOUTHI OFFENSIEVE
The Houthis and security forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh had earlier launched a fresh offensive against Aden, shelling it and battling local militias, but were pushed back by at least two air strikes, security officials said. Saleh stepped down following a 2011 Arab Spring uprising, but has maintained wide influence through loyalists in the security forces.Yemeni security officials say the combined force of Houthis and Saleh loyalists is positioned about 30 kilometres (19 miles) east of Aden, near the southern city of Zinjibar. The rebels have used artillery to target pro-Hadi militias known as the Popular Committees. Battles are also underway near the airport. Fighting in the area continued late into the night.
The account of the fighting was confirmed by four military and security officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to brief reporters.
Emboldened by the air strikes, the Popular Committees have largely held their ground in Aden province and still control most of the city.
The death toll from the ground fighting in Aden since Thursday has reached at least 86, with some 600 people wounded, according to Abdel-Nasser al-Wali, head of a local medical centre.
The strikes in Sanaa have targeted militants, jets, air defence systems and Scud missile launch pads that could threaten Saudi Arabia.
People power ... A rally against the war in Yemen, in Islamabad, Pakistan. Source: AP
Source: AP
CITIES SHUT DOWN
Officials said aircraft struck areas near the presidential palace in Sanaa and several other sites across the city, sending fireballs rising into the sky, shattering windows and shaking houses. The thunder of rockets, artillery and tank rounds echoed through the streets.The daily air strikes have bred a climate of anxiety and uncertainty in Sanaa. Schools are shuttered, residents are staying indoors, and hundreds have fled to the safety of nearby villages.
In the southern city of Baihan in Shabwa province, air strikes mistakenly struck a gathering of anti-Houthi tribesmen, causing a number of deaths and injuries, a tribal leader said on condition of anonymity, citing security concerns. It was not clear how many were killed.
Fighting meanwhile intensified in the southern city of al-Dhale, where the Houthis and Saleh loyalists have been trying to open up a corridor to Aden. They have met fierce resistance there, and the city is currently split between supporters and opponents of the rebels.
Since the air campaign began, the Houthis have arrested some 140 foreign nationals on suspicion that they are providing the Saudis with intelligence on the locations of army barracks, radars and air defence positions, according to the rebel-controlled Interior Ministry.
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