Yemen clashes rage despite Saudi-led coalition's 'commitment to peace'

Yemen clashes rage despite Saudi-led coalition's 'commitment to peace'
Rebels and government sources both reported intense fighting in Hodeida on Monday, despite calls by the UN and the United States for an end to the war.

3 min read
05 November, 2018
Government forces and Saudi-led coalition troops began an assault on Hodeida last week [Getty]

Battles raged near a Yemeni port crucial for humanitarian aid on Monday, despite Saudi Arabia and its allies alleging they were committed to de-escalating hostilities with rebels amid mounting calls for ceasefire.

Yemeni government forces, backed by a regional military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, say they are now positioned around both the north and south of Hodeida, where clashes have left dozens dead.

The city and its port have been controlled by the Houthis - Iran-backed insurgents who hail from northern Yemen - since 2014 along with the capital Sanaa.

Rebels and government sources both reported intense fighting in the area on Monday, despite calls by the UN and the United States -which provides military support to the Saudi-led camp - for an end to the war.

Medics at two hospitals in Hodeida province said they had counted the bodies of a total of 74 rebels and dozens of wounded, requesting anonymity as they were not authorised to brief the press. 

Sources at a military hospital in government-held Mokha, south of Hodeida, said 15 troops were killed over the same period.

A source in the Saudi-led coalition told AFP the clashes were not "offensive operations", adding that the alliance was "committed to keeping the Hodeida port open".

But three officials with the Yemeni military said fighting continued to flare around Hodeida, whose port is the entry point for three quarters of the country's imports.

The head of the Houthis' revolutionary council, Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, on Monday reported a "military escalation by the coalition," slamming the operation as "a strenuous attempt to block talks aimed at ending the war and finding peace".

 

The United Nations has appealed for urgent peace talks and warned that an assault on the Red Sea port city of Hodeida would threaten millions of lives.

But Yemeni military officials said government forces are trying to advance on the outskirts of Hodeida with the aim of surrounding the city and cutting off a major rebel supply route. 

The World Health Organisation estimates more than 10,000 people have been killed since then, but human rights groups say the toll could be five times higher

The coalition source however said the government alliance was "committed to de-escalating hostilities in Yemen and strongly supportive of the UN envoy's political process". 

"If the Houthis fail to show up for peace talks again, this might lead (us) to restart the offensive operation in Hodeida," the source said.

"The humanitarian situation in Yemen is unacceptable. We are committed to ending the conflict as soon as possible.

UN envoy Martin Griffiths aims to bring the government of Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and the Houthis to Sweden for talks in the coming month.

The Saudi-led alliance had suspended an offensive to take Hodeida in August, ahead of UN efforts to hold negotiations in Geneva that eventually collapsed the following month.

The Houthis refused to travel to Switzerland unless the United Nations guaranteed both their delegation's safe return to Sanaa and the evacuation of wounded fighters.

Saudi Arabia and its allies, which control aid deliveries to Hodeida through Yemen's seafront, accuse Iran of smuggling missiles to the Huthis through the port. 

The rebels control northern Yemen and have regularly targeted Saudi Arabian border towns as well as the capital Riyadh with ballistic missiles. 

Saudi Arabia and its allies intervened in the Yemen conflict in 2015 with the aim of bolstering President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi in the face of the Houthi insurgency.

The World Health Organisation estimates more than 10,000 people have been killed since then, but human rights groups say the toll could be five times higher.

Fourteen million people now stand at the brink of famine in Yemen, which the United Nations has called the world's worst humanitarian crisis and "a living hell" for children.

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