Aircraft from a Saudi-led coalition attacked Yemen’s interior ministry in the capital, Sana’a, late on Friday and launched several other raids on sites in the heart of the city, residents and other sources said.
The air raids by the coalition have intensified in recent weeks as a Gulf-Arab ground force and fighters loyal to exiled Yemeni President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi prepare a campaign to recapture Sana’a, seized by Houthi fighters in September last year.
Residents said about 10 airstrikes were launched on the ministry building in the north of the capital, a police camp close to it and a military building.
Photo: AFP
The health ministry issued an urgent appeal saying it did not have the capacity to treat all those injured as a result of the strikes on several areas of Sana’a, the official Houthi-controlled news agency said yesterday.
Hospitals lack the basic medicines necessary for treating the wounded and lack fuel to operate ambulances and hospital equipment, a health ministry official was quoted as saying.
The raids also targeted the presidential complex and a party building of former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh which had already been destroyed in 2011, residents said.
Several air raids also targeted the Fulaihi area of Old Sana’a early yesterday morning, destroying several houses.
The Omani ministry of foreign affairs said the residence of its ambassador in Sana’a was hit by a strike on Friday and denounced the act.
“Oman received with deep regret yesterday’s news targeting the ambassador’s home in Sana’a, which is a clear violation of international charters and norms that emphasize the inviolability of diplomatic premises,” the statement said.
The statement urged the Yemeni parties to put aside their differences with each other to ensure the return of stability and security in Yemen.
In Saada Province, about 30 people were killed in various strikes on Friday, a news agency controlled by the Houthis said.
The coalition began airstrikes against the Houthis and their allies — forces loyal to Saleh — in late March after they pushed from their northern stronghold towards the southern port of Aden.
It is pushing ahead with an offensive in Marib, about 120km east of Sana’a, trying to drive the Houthis out of the province in preparation for a push against the capital.
Sources within the coalition have said they are waiting for “zero hour” to launch a full attack on Marib which will signal the end of the Houthi rebellion, pan-Arab television al-Arabiyah said.
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