Yemen clashes kill more than 100 as aid delayed
BY Agencies7 April 2015 6:32 AM IST
Agencies7 April 2015 6:32 AM IST
Fierce clashes raged on Monday between rebels and loyalists in southern Yemen, leaving more than 100 dead in 24 hours, as the Red Cross faced delays to urgently needed aid deliveries.
Relief workers have warned of a dire situation in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula state, where a Saudi-led coalition is waging an air war on the Iran-backed Huthi Shiite rebels.
Most of the 114 deaths in the past 24 hours occurred in fighting between rebels and loyalists of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi in the main southern city of Aden.
Seventeen civilians were among 53 people killed in Aden where fighting continued as rebels tried to seize a port in the city, which sits on an extinct volcano jutting out into the sea. At least 19 Huthis and 15 pro-Hadi militiamen were killed overnight in the town of Daleh, north of Aden, officials said.
Seven more people were killed in the southern province of Abyan, where pro-Hadi fighters have laid siege to the base of a renegade army brigade loyal to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is accused of backing the Huthis.
In nearby Lahj, coalition air strikes hit the strategic Al-Anad airbase and a nearby military camp, killing 10 rebels and forcing many others to flee, an army source and witnesses said.
In Shabwa province, eight rebels were killed in an air raid as two others died in clashes with tribes, sources said.
Hadi, considered by the UN to be Yemen’s legitimate leader, took refuge in Aden in February after the Huthis, who hail from the mountainous north, seized power in Sanaa.
Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia last month as rebels advanced on his southern stronghold, prompting the military campaign by the Saudi-led coalition, now in its 12th day.
Yemen, strategically located near key shipping routes and bordering oil-rich Saudi Arabia, is sinking deeper into a multi-sided civil conflict.
The fighting has drawn in an array of armed groups including the Huthis, pro-Hadi militia, army units loyal to Saleh, southern separatists, Sunni tribes and Al-Qaeda militants.
Pak debates military support to Saudi-led war in Yemen
Islamabad: Pakistan said on Monday that its close ally Saudi Arabia has asked for ground troops, warships and fighter planes to oust the Shia rebels in war-torn Yemen as lawmakers debate whether the country should join the conflict which has sectarian and domestic implications.
The special joint session of parliament has been convened as pressure is mounting on Islamabad to act swiftly in support of Riyadh. At the start of the session, defence minister Khawaja Asif moved a motion to discuss the crisis and whether to join Saudi forces’ military operations against the Shia Houthi rebels in Yemen.
The minister in his policy statement said that Pakistan wanted peaceful solution of the Yemen issue through political and diplomatic means.
Relief workers have warned of a dire situation in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula state, where a Saudi-led coalition is waging an air war on the Iran-backed Huthi Shiite rebels.
Most of the 114 deaths in the past 24 hours occurred in fighting between rebels and loyalists of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi in the main southern city of Aden.
Seventeen civilians were among 53 people killed in Aden where fighting continued as rebels tried to seize a port in the city, which sits on an extinct volcano jutting out into the sea. At least 19 Huthis and 15 pro-Hadi militiamen were killed overnight in the town of Daleh, north of Aden, officials said.
Seven more people were killed in the southern province of Abyan, where pro-Hadi fighters have laid siege to the base of a renegade army brigade loyal to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is accused of backing the Huthis.
In nearby Lahj, coalition air strikes hit the strategic Al-Anad airbase and a nearby military camp, killing 10 rebels and forcing many others to flee, an army source and witnesses said.
In Shabwa province, eight rebels were killed in an air raid as two others died in clashes with tribes, sources said.
Hadi, considered by the UN to be Yemen’s legitimate leader, took refuge in Aden in February after the Huthis, who hail from the mountainous north, seized power in Sanaa.
Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia last month as rebels advanced on his southern stronghold, prompting the military campaign by the Saudi-led coalition, now in its 12th day.
Yemen, strategically located near key shipping routes and bordering oil-rich Saudi Arabia, is sinking deeper into a multi-sided civil conflict.
The fighting has drawn in an array of armed groups including the Huthis, pro-Hadi militia, army units loyal to Saleh, southern separatists, Sunni tribes and Al-Qaeda militants.
Pak debates military support to Saudi-led war in Yemen
Islamabad: Pakistan said on Monday that its close ally Saudi Arabia has asked for ground troops, warships and fighter planes to oust the Shia rebels in war-torn Yemen as lawmakers debate whether the country should join the conflict which has sectarian and domestic implications.
The special joint session of parliament has been convened as pressure is mounting on Islamabad to act swiftly in support of Riyadh. At the start of the session, defence minister Khawaja Asif moved a motion to discuss the crisis and whether to join Saudi forces’ military operations against the Shia Houthi rebels in Yemen.
The minister in his policy statement said that Pakistan wanted peaceful solution of the Yemen issue through political and diplomatic means.
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