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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Riyadh (AFP) Oct 20, 2021
A Saudi-led coalition said Wednesday it killed more than 82 Huthi rebels in air strikes near Yemen's strategic city of Marib, during a second week of intense reported bombing. The Iran-backed Huthis rarely comment on losses, and the numbers could not be independently verified by AFP. This is the tenth consecutive day that the coalition has announced strikes around Marib, reporting a total of around 1,300 rebel fatalities. Most of the previously announced strikes were in Abdiya about 100 kilometres (60 miles) from Marib -- the internationally recognised government's last bastion in oil-rich northern Yemen. "Operations targeted 11 military vehicles and killed more than 82 terrorist elements" in the past 24 hours in the districts of Al-Jawba and Al-Kassara, the coalition fighting in Yemen said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency. Al-Jawba lies about 50 kilometres south of the city and Al-Kassara is about 30 kilometres northwest. According to a government military official on Wednesday, the Huthis have made "small advances" in Al-Jawba amid clashes with loyalist troops. The Huthis began a major push to seize Marib in February and have renewed their offensive since September after a lull. The Yemeni civil war began in 2014 when the Huthis seized the capital Sanaa, 120 kilometres (75 miles) west of Marib, prompting Saudi-led forces to intervene to prop up the government the following year. Tens of thousands of people have died and millions have been displaced in what the United Nations calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis. The seven years of conflict have killed or injured at least 10,000 children, the United Nations children's fund, UNICEF, said on Tuesday after a mission to the country.
![]() ![]() Germany arrests two ex-soldiers over Yemen paramilitary bid Berlin (AFP) Oct 20, 2021 Police on Wednesday arrested two former German soldiers accused of trying to form a "terrorist" paramilitary group to fight in Yemen's civil war, prosecutors said. The two men had taken steps to "create a paramilitary unit of 100 to 150 men" composed of former police officers and soldiers, the Karlsruhe federal prosecutor's office said in southwestern Germany. Named as Arend-Adolf G. and Achim A., both German citizens, the pair are accused of starting to plan their "terrorist organisation" in ea ... read more
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