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Saudi warns of reprisals after new Yemen missile
by Staff Writers
Riyadh (AFP) Dec 22, 2015


Fresh bloodshed in Yemen despite extended ceasefire
Aden (AFP) Dec 22, 2015 - A fresh bout of deadly fighting and air strikes hit Yemen on Tuesday, despite an extended ceasefire that was supposed to come into force overnight, military sources said.

Foreign Minister Abdulmalek al-Mikhlafi said late Monday that President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi had decided to prolong the week-long ceasefire for another seven days in a bid to resolve the conflict.

The United Nations says the conflict pitting Iran-backed rebels against loyalists supported by a Saudi-led coalition has killed nearly 6,000 people since March.

The initial truce was violated on a daily basis since it came into effect on December 15, in conjunction with UN-brokered peace talks in Switzerland.

In the latest bloodshed, at least 13 rebel fighters were killed in air strikes on the northern province of Daleh overnight, military sources said.

The rebels reportedly shelled an area near the central city of Taez, where loyalist forces have been besieged for months.

Fighting also took place in other parts of the Arabian Peninsula country, including the northern provinces of Hajja and Jawf, strongholds of the Shiite Huthi rebels, as well as Shabwa in central Yemen.

Saudi-led warplanes carried out eight raids early Tuesday on Huthi fighters and their allies at Rahida and Shuraija, on the border between Taez and Lahj provinces, the military sources said.

There were dead and wounded, the sources said, without providing any figures.

The Saudi-led coalition threatened severe reprisals late Monday against rebels in Yemen, after they fired a fourth ballistic missile in as many days towards the neighbouring kingdom.

Official media said Saudi Arabia intercepted a rocket fired towards the border city of Jazan late on Monday and then destroyed the missile launcher in Yemen.

The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen threatened severe reprisals late Monday against rebels in the neighbouring country, after they fired a fourth ballistic missile in as many days towards Saudi territory.

Official media said Saudi Arabia intercepted a rocket fired towards the border city of Jazan late on Monday and then destroyed the missile launcher in Yemen.

The kingdom has deployed Patriot missile batteries designed to counter tactical ballistic missiles.

Air defences shot down another missile fired towards Jazan on Monday morning.

On Friday, the coalition said a ballistic missile had been intercepted and that a second missile struck a desert area east of Najran city.

Those attacks came after a local source reported that on September 13 another missile struck a desert area of the kingdom's south, causing no damage.

Three civilians, two of them from India, died on Saturday when shellfire from Yemen struck the border city of Najran.

All these attacks, as well as fighting on the ground in Yemen, came despite a seven-day ceasefire in conjunction with peace talks in Switzerland.

The talks between Yemen's government and Iran-backed Shiite Huthi rebels concluded on Sunday without a major breakthrough.

The head of the Yemeni government negotiating team, Foreign Minister Abdel Malak al-Mekhlafi, said the much-violated ceasefire would be extended for seven days after its expiry on Monday.

"The coalition command made it clear that while it is keen to deal positively with the Yemeni government's request for an extension of the truce, the continuation of the Huthi militias in their absurdity will push the command of the coalition to take harsh measures to deter such acts," the Saudi-led bloc said.

The Huthis are allied with elite troops loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

On Sunday a spokesman for forces allied to the Huthis vowed to intensify missile attacks on Saudi targets.

Brigadier General Sharaf Luqman said "300 Saudi military and vital targets" had been chosen.

The rebels and their allies still have "about 60 to 70 missiles, including Tochka missiles", Yemeni army sources say, despite coalition claims to have neutralised their ballistic capabilities.

Saba news agency controlled by the Huthis confirmed they fired "a Qaher-1 ballistic missile" Monday evening.

Coalition warplanes and troops have been supporting anti-rebel forces in support of Yemeni President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.

More than 80 people, most of them soldiers and border guards, have been killed in shelling and cross-border skirmishes in the kingdom's south since coalition operations began in Yemen.


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