Around 20 killed in deadliest coalition strikes on Yemen's Sanaa since
2019
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[January 18, 2022]
ADEN, Yemen (Reuters) -Air strikes
by the Saudi-led coalition fighting Yemen's Houthi group on the capital
Sanaa killed at least 20 people overnight, including civilians, Houthi
media and residents said, in one of its deadliest attacks since 2019.
Around 14 people were killed when coalition planes struck the home of a
high-ranking Houthi military official, including his wife and son,
according to neighbours and a medic.
The air strikes followed Monday's drone and missile attack on coalition
partner the United Arab Emirates that was claimed by the Iran-aligned
Houthis and killed three people.
The coalition also said it intercepted eight Houthi drones launched
toward Saudi Arabia on Monday.
Early on Tuesday, the coalition said it had begun air strikes against
strongholds and camps in Sanaa belonging to the Houthi group, Saudi
state media said.
Houthi media named the Houthi military official whose home was struck as
Abdullah Qassim al-Junaid, the former head of the Houthis' aviation
college.
The strike killed him, his wife, his 25-year-old son, other family
members and other unidentified people, the medical source and residents
told Reuters.
On Tuesday men at the aftermath combed through rubble, strewn with
belongings, books and twisted metal, as well as debris from heavily
damaged neighbouring houses.
At the scene Ahmad al-Ahdal said his uncle's house was hit after the
strike on Junaid's home.
"My uncle went in with rescuers to extract the victims in Junaid's
house," he said. "We have been unable to find him since then."
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Rescuers search for survivors under the collapsed roof of a house
hit by Saudi-led air strikes in Sanaa, Yemen, January 18, 2022.
REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah
Junaid was among over 170 Houthi
officials sentenced to death by firing squad in August by a court in
the province of Marib, which remains under the control of the
Saudi-backed, internationally recognised Yemeni government.
The court found the defendants, most of whom were tried in absentia,
guilty of staging a military coup and committing war crimes, state
media reported at the time.
Coalition strikes around the city overnight killed a total of about
20 people, the deputy foreign minister for the Houthi
administration, which holds much of northern Yemen, said on Twitter.
The UAE armed and trained Yemeni forces that recently joined
fighting against the Houthis in Yemen's energy-producing regions of
Shabwa and Marib.
Monday's Houthi-claimed attack on two sites in Abu Dhabi set off
explosions in fuel trucks and ignited a blaze near Abu Dhabi
airport.
In response, the UAE said it reserved the right to respond to
"terrorist attacks and criminal escalation".
(Reporting by Alaa Swilam and Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Lisa
Barrington; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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