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WAR REPORT
Air strikes and clashes shatter Yemen truce
By Fawaz al-Haidari
Aden (AFP) July 29, 2015


Yemen to merge 'resistance' fighters with army
Aden (AFP) July 29, 2015 - Yemen's exiled government has issued an order for militiamen fighting alongside loyalist troops against Shiite rebels to be merged into the armed forces, as clashes raged Wednesday in the south.

The supreme defence council, which met in Riyadh on Tuesday, decided to "assimilate members of the Popular Resistance into the units of the armed forces and security forces", the government-run news agency said.

The meeting, headed by President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, took the decision to reward them for their "brave contribution to defending the homeland".

Popular Resistance units were formed when the Iran-backed rebels and their allies advanced on southern regions after they had overrun the capital in September.

Meanwhile, clashes raged in the south, where pro-government forces expanded their area of control after recapturing the port of Aden, Yemen's second city, after four months of fighting.

The loyalists pushed back rebels in Lahoum, on Aden's northern outskirts, following heavy fighting in which 12 rebels were killed, military sources said.

Three pro-Hadi fighters were killed and dozens wounded, medical sources said.

Saudi-led Arab coalition warplanes carried out several raids in southern Yemen in support of the loyalist forces, military sources said.

The Lahoum area is on the road to Lahj, where loyalists have been tightening the noose on rebels, with the aim of recapturing the strategic Al-Anad airbase.

The clashes underlined the collapse of a five-day truce declared from midnight Sunday by the pro-Hadi Arab coalition to allow the delivery of desperately needed relief supplies.

In the rebel-held capital Sanaa, a car bombing claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group near a mosque of the Bohra sect of Shiite Islam killed four people, medical sources and witnesses said.

Four months of fighting have left almost 4,000 people dead, nearly half of them civilians, according to the United Nations.

A humanitarian truce in Yemen has failed to take hold after Saudi-led warplanes Tuesday resumed raids on rebels who clashed with loyalists, military sources said.

Iran, which backs the Shiite Huthi rebels, accused its Sunni regional rival Riyadh of "playing with fire and with the ceasefire".

An international rights group, meanwhile, urged the United Nations to investigate air strikes last week that killed scores of civilians, calling them an "apparent war crime".

The five-day truce that began on Monday was unilaterally declared by the pro-government Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia to allow the delivery of desperately needed relief supplies.

But the coalition, which began its air campaign against the Shiite Huthi rebels and their allies in late March, had said it also reserved the right to strike against any military movement by the insurgents.

Air strikes targeted rebels north of Aden, Yemen's second city, most of which was recaptured by loyalists last week after four months of ferocious fighting, military sources said.

Raids also struck rebels in nearby Lahj province, where forces loyal to exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi have tightened the noose on insurgents in the strategic Al-Anad airbase.

Three air strikes targeted a rebel convoy near Sabr, north of Aden, where loyalists had advanced over the past days, military sources said.

- Saudis 'playing with fire' -

Other raids hit a building occupied by insurgents in Jaawala -- also north of Aden -- and an overnight strike hit rebels in Marib east of Sanaa, witnesses said.

Fighting around Aden has killed 28 people since Monday, among them 22 rebels, two civilians and two pro-Hadi fighters, city health chief Al-Khader Laswar said.

On Monday, coalition warplanes mistakenly hit positions of pro-government forces in Lahj, killing 12 people and wounding 30, military sources and witnesses said.

Iran's deputy foreign minister, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, accused Riyadh Tuesday of stirring regional unrest.

"Saudi Arabia, by committing a strategic error in attacking Yemen, is playing with fire and today is playing with the ceasefire," Iranian state television quoted him as saying.

"The continued use of force in Yemen highlights the lack of security and promotes terrorism in the region," Amir-Abdollahian said.

Human Rights Watch, meanwhile, called on the United Nations to investigate coalition air strikes that hit residential areas, condemning them as an "apparent war crime".

Last week, coalition aircraft repeatedly struck two compounds housing the families of workers at the Mokha Steam Power Plant, killing 65 civilians, the New York-based watchdog said.

"With no evident military target, this attack appears to be a war crime," said HRW senior emergencies researcher Ole Solvang.

- Attacks on humanitarian workers -

Ahead of the unilateral ceasefire, which took effect from midnight Sunday, UN chief Ban Ki-moon made a plea for all sides to "agree to and maintain the humanitarian pause for the sake of all the Yemeni people".

The rebels said they were not consulted about the truce.

The UN's aid chief Stephen O'Brien, meanwhile, urged the Security Council to redouble efforts to secure a pause in the conflict, which he said had "brought appalling damage on an already suffering people".

Four months of fighting in Yemen have left 3,984 people dead, nearly half of them civilians, according to the United Nations.

The International Committee of the Red Cross urged the warring parties Tuesday to respect the safety of humanitarian workers, after two people were killed when a Red Crescent ambulance came under fire in the third city of Taez.

"It is extremely worrying that the past couple of months have seen an increasing number of attacks against health-care workers and relief personnel in the country," a statement said.

Johannes Van Der Klaauw, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Yemen, made an urgent appeal Monday for humanitarian access, describing Adan "devastated" after a visit to the city.

"I repeat my plea to all parties of the conflict to put an end to the attacks on civilians and to end the destruction of critical infrastructure, vital for supplying essential goods and services to the civilian population," he said.

"The UN and its partners are committed to rapidly scaling up the humanitarian response effort across the whole of Yemen."


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WAR REPORT
'Friendly fire' kills Yemen loyalists despite truce
Aden (AFP) July 27, 2015
Warplanes from the Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-backed rebels in Yemen hit positions of pro-government forces by mistake on Monday despite a humanitarian truce, killing a dozen people, military sources said. Clashes also broke out on the ground in several areas of the impoverished country in spite of UN calls for all sides to respect a ceasefire to allow desperately needed aid deliverie ... read more


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