Saudi airstrike in Yemen kills
20, including children
Saudi-backed Yemeni government forces have been battling the Iran-backed Houthi rebels since 2015.- ANSA |
The Saudi-led coalition said it targeted the Houthis, who
had fired a missile at the kingdom's south the previous day, killing one person
and wounding 11 others.
An airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition fighting Shiite
Houthi rebels in Yemen hit a bus in a market in the north of the
country on Thursday, killing at least 20 people, including children,
and wounding as many as 35, Yemeni tribal leaders said.
The airstrike hit the Dahyan market in
Saada province, a Houthi stronghold, along the border with Saudi
Arabia.
According to Yemeni elders, who spoke on condition of
anonymity for fear of reprisals, the bus was ferrying local civilians,
including many school children.
Johannes Bruwer, head of delegation for the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Yemen, said in a twitter
post, "Scores killed, even more injured, most under the age of
10."
The Saudi-led coalition said it targeted the Houthis,
who had fired a missile at the kingdom's south the previous day, killing one
person and wounding 11 others.
Yemen's rebel-run Al Masirah TV aired dramatic images of
wounded children, their clothes and schoolbags covered with blood as they lay
on hospital stretchers. According to the TV, 39 people were killed and 51
wounded, mainly children.
Yemen’s 3-year conflict
Saudi Arabia and Sunni Muslim allies have been fighting in Yemen for more than three years against the Iran-aligned Houthis, who control much of north Yemen including the capital Sanaa and drove a Saudi-backed government into exile in 2014.
Later on Thursday, airstrikes hit the Yemeni capital, Sanaa,
and sounds of the blasts reverberated across the city's southern and western
neighborhoods. It was not immediately clear if there were any casualties in
those strikes.
Worst humanitarian crisis
Already one of the region’s poorest nations before the start of the war in 2015 , Yemen today is the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with more than 22.2 million people, or 75% of the population, in need of humanitarian assistance. The conflict has left 2 million people displaced from their homes.
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