Saudi-led coalition captures large areas
of Yemen's Hodeidah airport: UAE
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[June 19, 2018]
By Mohammed Ghobari
ADEN (Reuters) - Arab coalition troops
stormed the airport in Yemen's main port Hodeidah on Tuesday and
captured large areas of the compound in battles with Iran-aligned
Houthis, a Yemeni military source, the UAE news agency and local
residents said.
Wresting the airport from the Houthis would be an important gain for the
coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which
pledged a swift assault on the city to avoid disrupting aid deliveries
to Yemen through the port.
The Western-backed alliance launched the onslaught on Hodeidah on June
12 to try and turn the tables in a long-stalemated proxy war between
Saudi Arabia and Iran that has exacerbated turmoil across the Middle
East.
"They have stormed the airport," an anti-Houthi Yemeni military source
told Reuters.
"This is the first time we hear the clashes so clearly. We an hear the
sound of artillery and machinegun fire," said a resident who requested
anonymity. Warplanes had bombarded the airport earlier in the morning,
the resident added.
The UAE state news agency WAM said large swathes of the airport compound
had been taken by coalition forces.
The escalation in fighting has wounded and displaced dozens of civilians
and hampered humanitarian agencies trying to send vital aid to million
of Yemenis via the Red Sea port.
Tuesday's battles spread panic among local inhabitants.
“My children are terrified. The fighting and the sounds of explosions
are everywhere and we are stuck in our house in the district of Rabsa
with no running water," Iman, a 37-year-old mother of two, said
tearfully.
"What have we done for all of this?”
Mohamed Sharaf, 44, a civil servant, said he had sent his entire family
to Sanaa, the inland capital, several days ago and he was getting ready
to leave himself. "There is death and destruction everywhere in this
city,” he said.
The United Nations fears the offensive will worsen what is already the
world's most urgent humanitarian crisis, with 22 million Yemenis
dependent on aid, and an estimated 8.4 million believed to be on the
verge of starvation.
U.N. officials estimate that 600,000 people live in and around Hodeidah
and that in a worst-case scenario the battles could cost up to 250,000
lives.
Hodeidah port remained open on Tuesday with the U.N. World Food
Programme racing to unload three ships containing enough food for six
million people for one month, WFP spokeswoman Bettina Luescher told
reporters in Geneva.
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Hodeidah port's cranes are pictured from a nearby shantytown in
Hodeidah, Yemen June 16, 2018. REUTERS/Abduljabbar Zeyad
ESCAPE ROUTE
UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said on
Monday the coalition was taking a measured approach to minimize
risks to civilians, and allowing the Houthis an escape route inland
to their bastion in the capital Sanaa.
The Arab states say their aim is to seize the airport and port
quickly and to avoid street battles in the city center. But Hodeidah
is well defended as it constitutes the key supply line to
Houthi-controlled territory including Sanaa.
Gargash said the coalition was counting on Martin Griffiths, the
U.N. special envoy for Yemen who arrived in Sanaa on Saturday, to
broker a Houthi agreement to leave Hodeidah.
But Griffiths departed Sanaa on Tuesday without comment, witnesses
said, leaving unclear whether any headway was made.
A member of the Houthis' ruling politburo, Mohammed al-Bukhaiti,
denied the talks with Griffiths had focused on handing over Hodeidah
"because this request is unrealistic".
"During all his visits, the envoy has discussed a comprehensive
political solution that addresses...all fronts and not only
Hodeidah," he told Reuters by telephone.
The coalition intervened in Yemen's war in 2015 to try and unseat
the Houthis, restore the internationally recognised Yemeni
government in exile and thwart what Riyadh and Abu Dhabi see as
Iran's expansionism in the region.
The Houthis, who control most of the populated areas in the
chronically unstable nation of 30 million people, deny the Arab
states' assertions that they are puppets of Iran. They say they
reflect a popular revolt against state corruption and are protecting
the Yemen from foreign invasion.
Taking Hodeidah could hand a long sought edge to the Arab alliance
which, despite superior weaponry and firepower, has failed to defeat
the Houthis in a grinding war that has killed more than 10,000
people.
(Additional reporting by Dahlia Nehme and Maha El Dahan in Dubai,
Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by
Mark Heinrich)
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