| | Date: Sep 19, 2018 | Source: The Daily Star | | Heated battle to ‘liberate’ Hudaida from rebels resumes | Agence France Presse
ADEN, Yemen: Arab coalition-backed government forces in Yemen launched a series of attacks on rebel-held Hudaida, military officials said Tuesday, raising fears of a humanitarian crisis as an 11-week pause in the battle for the port city ended. Pro-government forces and medical sources in Hudaida province told AFP that 40 Houthis have been killed around the port city since Monday night.
The Houthi rebels accused the government and its Arab allies of deliberately targeting food warehouses Monday night, as the Arab coalition said it had resumed a “military operation to liberate Hudaida and its port.”
The fight for Hudaida – which the Houthis seized in 2014 – had been put on hold for 11 weeks while the United Nations struggled to bring warring parties to peace talks in Geneva.
But the talks collapsed earlier this month after the northern Yemeni rebels failed to turn up in Geneva.
The Red Sea port of Hudaida is a vital lifeline for aid shipments to Yemen, the most impoverished country in the Arab world.
The United Nations has warned that any major fighting could result in a halt on food distributions to 8 million Yemenis dependent on them for survival.
Brig. Gen. Ali al-Taniji, commander of coalition forces on Yemen’s west coast, confirmed that the alliance had launched an operation in Hudaida, in a statement to state media in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia’s main partner in the coalition.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a senior coalition official told AFP the operation was being fought on multiple fronts.
Residents in and around the city, home to a population of 600,000, reported hearing explosions throughout Monday night.
The Houthis accused the coalition of targeting food supply warehouses in the raids, charging the international community was complicit in the attacks.
“International food supply warehouses were targeted in Hudaida, a clear sign that there is a plan ... to make warehouses and densely populated neighborhoods legitimate targets of their terrorist operations,” said Mohammad Ali al-Houthi, the head of the rebels’ Supreme Revolutionary Council.
“International tolerance of terrorism has only encouraged [the coalition] to plan and deliberately commit crimes,” Houthi said.
A spokesman for the coalition did not respond to a request for comment, while a World Food Program spokeswoman declined to comment on whether the U.N. agency’s facilities had been hit.
Saudi Arabia and its allies accuse the Houthi rebels of smuggling arms from Iran through Hudaida and has imposed a partial blockade on the port. The Houthis and Iran both deny the charges.
U.N. envoy Martin Griffiths left the Yemeni capital Sanaa Tuesday, ending a three-day trip.
Griffiths is pushing for new peace talks after proposed negotiations between the Houthis and government fell apart in Geneva earlier this month when rebel delegates failed to show up, say they had not received guarantees for their safe return home afterwards.
The United Nations Monday announced it was working to open a humanitarian air bridge to transport Yemeni cancer patients abroad for treatment.
The Houthis said plans to fly patients out of Sanaa Tuesday had been foiled by the coalition, accusing it of failing to cooperate.
World Health Organization spokeswoman Fadela Chaib told AFP there was “no date set for the first flight” pending “final approval from all parties.”
While the rebels control the capital, home to Yemen’s main international airport, Saudi Arabia and its allies control Yemen’s airspace.
Sanaa international airport is currently under blockade.
In wheelchairs and carrying sick babies, Yemenis in the rebel-held capital lined up Tuesday outside the health ministry as rumors of the impending flight spread.
Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, Yemen’s ambassador to the U.N., said that his government was willing to “do whatever it takes to alleviate the suffering and pain of Yemenis,” in a letter to Secretary General Antonio Guterres.
But he asked that the U.N. and all its branches not sign agreements or memoranda “except with the legitimate, internationally recognized government of Yemen.”
Saudi Arabia and its allies launched a major operation to retake Hudaida in June.
The port is the entry point of most of Yemen’s imports and aid.
The troops, backed by coalition airstrikes, have retaken a number of towns across Hudaida province but have not yet breached the city.
In July, the coalition announced it would temporarily suspend its offensive to give a chance to U.N.-brokered peace talks.
The coalition intervened in the Yemen conflict in 2015 in a bid to bolster embattled Yemeni President Abed Rabbou Mansour Hadi, whose government is recognized by the United Nations, in his war against the Houthis.
Nearly 10,000 people have since been killed and the country now stands on the brink of famine. | |
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