Houthis clash with militias in fight for Aden

Reports of 36 more killed in Yemen as Red Cross appeals for 24-hour pause

Yemenis stand beside trucks  allegedly destroyed by an airstrike of the Saudi-led coalition,  in the Hais district of Hodeidah, Yemen, yesterday. Photograph: Abdul-Rahman Hwais/EPA
Yemenis stand beside trucks allegedly destroyed by an airstrike of the Saudi-led coalition, in the Hais district of Hodeidah, Yemen, yesterday. Photograph: Abdul-Rahman Hwais/EPA

Houthi fighters and allied army units clashed with local militias in Aden, southern Yemen, on Sunday and witnesses said gunshots and heavy shelling ripped through a downtown district near the city’s port.

The Houthi forces have been fighting to take Aden, a last foothold of fighters loyal to Saudi-backed president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, advancing to the city centre despite 11 days of air strikes by a Saudi-led coalition of mainly Gulf air forces.

Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia launched the air strikes on March 26th in an attempt to turn back the Iran-allied Shia Houthis, who already control Yemen’s capital Sanaa, and restore some of Mr Hadi’s crumbling authority.

The air and sea campaign has targeted Houthi convoys, missiles and weapons stores and cut off any possible outside reinforcements – although the Houthis deny Saudi accusations that they are armed by Tehran.

READ MORE

The fighting has failed so far to inflict any decisive defeat on the Houthis, or the supporters of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh who are fighting alongside them, but the growing death toll and humanitarian suffering has alarmed aid groups.

Appeal for pause

The United Nations said on Thursday that more than 500 people had been killed in two weeks of fighting in Yemen, while the International Committee of the Red Cross has appealed for an immediate 24-hour pause in fighting to allow aid into Yemen.

The ICRC, which has blamed the Saudi-led coalition for delays in aid shipments, said it received approval to fly in medical supplies and staff and hoped to send two planes today. A spokesman for the military coalition said the ICRC had approval to fly in aid yesterday but pulled out because of problems with the plane charter company.

Brig Gen Ahmed Asseri also said a Sudanese flight was prevented from landing at Sanaa on Sunday by authorities in the Houthi-run capital, and a Turkish evacuation flight was held up. “Usually, the delay is because of the other side,” he said. A pro-Hadi militia source said 36 Houthi and allied fighters were killed yesterday in Aden’s central Mualla district, near the port, while 11 of Mr Hadi’s combatants died.

Houthi forces initially advanced towards the port area, but hours later had been pushed back several streets towards an army base.

“There are bodies in the streets and we can’t get close because there are Houthi snipers on the rooftops. Anything that gets near they shoot at, and the shelling on Mualla has been indiscriminate,” a medic said.

Gen Asseri said the coalition was providing pro-Hadi fighters with intelligence, equipment and logistics.

“We hope in a few days they will control most of the city,” he said.

Valentina Abdul Kareem, an Aden council member, called on both sides to implement a ceasefire so that civilians could be evacuated. “Aden is going through a humanitarian and health crisis,” Abdul Kareem said.

Residents and merchants said stores had largely run out of produce, milk and other foods due a lack of access to the rocky peninsula city, whose main routes to agricultural hinterlands lie through the battle zones.

Both Saudi Arabia and the Houthis say they are ready for talks which could return Yemen to the political transition which started when Mr Saleh stood down in 2012 following huge street protests.

But they have set out incompatible conditions for the talks and neighbouring Oman, which often steers an independent course in the Gulf and has stayed clear of the Saudi-led military operations, said last week that neither side was ready for negotiations.

A senior Houthi member said the group is ready for peace talks as long as the Saudi-led air campaign is halted and negotiations are overseen by “non-aggressive” parties.

–(Reuters)