Yemeni Shiite Muslim rebels said Saudi air attacks on northern Yemen killed 54 people on Sunday, many of them women and children.
The rebels, who often report attacks by Yemeni and Saudi fighter planes, said on their Web site that the strikes destroyed five houses in the town of Razeh, in mountainous Saada Province.
The report could not be verified as aid workers and media have limited access to the conflict zones and there was no immediate Saudi comment. Yemeni officials have previously denied that Saudi planes had carried out attacks on Yemen’s territory.
Last Sunday, the rebels said at least 70 people were killed in a Saudi air raid on a market in Razeh.
Saudi Arabia, a US ally and the world’s largest oil exporter, fears the growing instability in neighboring Yemen could turn into a major security threat for the kingdom by allowing al-Qaeda to gain a stronger foothold in the impoverished country.
Saudi Arabia began attacking Yemen’s Shiite Muslim rebels, known as the Houthis, in early November after the rebels staged a cross-border incursion and killed two Saudi border guards.
The rebels, who launched a rebellion against the Yemeni government in 2004, belong to the minority Zaidi sect of Shiism, and complain of social, economic and religious marginalization. Both the rebels and the government deny their aims are sectarian.
A state-run Web site said rebel leader Abdul-Malik al-Houthi was seriously wounded in a government attack that also killed a rebel military commander.
The rebels did not directly comment on the report, but cautioned on their Web site against believing “imaginary victories that the regime’s media [reports] from time to time.”
Besides fighting Shiite rebels in the north, Yemen faces increasing unrest and separatist sentiment in the south and growing activity by al-Qaeda’s regional wing.
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