AL-MUKALLA, Yemen
US and UK jets struck Houthi targets in Yemen’s western province of Hodeidah on Monday, the second wave of strikes on Houthi-held territory in less than 48 hours.
The Houthi-run Al-Masirah
channel reported that US and UK aircraft carried out one strike on the
Al-Jabanah region of Hodeidah but provided no information on the targeted
locations, casualties or damage.
The attack in Hodeidah came a
day after the Houthis said that the two countries had conducted three
airstrikes on unidentified targets in the Maytam region, north of Ibb province.
At the same time, US Central
Command said on Sunday evening that over the past 24 hours, its forces had
destroyed three Houthi drones and two missile systems in a Houthi-controlled
Yemeni area, all of which were threatening US-led coalition ships and commercial
vessels in international shipping lanes.
Houthi attacks on ships led
the US to form a coalition of marine task forces to defend vessels, designate
the Houthis as a terrorist group and launch strikes against Houthi-controlled
Yemen, including Sanaa, Saada, Ibb and Hodeidah, in collaboration with the UK.
Hodeidah, Yemen’s only major
coastal city under Houthi control, has received most of the US and UK strikes
since January, as the militia is said to have used its coasts to launch
explosive-laden and remote-controlled boats to attack ships.
The Houthis say their forces
are only targeting Israeli-linked ships to pressure Tel Aviv into ending its
Gaza war.
Meanwhile, Yemen’s government
requested financial assistance from GCC countries on Monday to help shore up
its faltering economy, stabilize the currency and pay public employees.
Rashad Al-Alimi, chairman of
the Presidential Leadership Council, met UAE Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed Hamad
Al-Zaab in Riyadh on Monday to discuss “necessary” financial support to boost
the country’s economy, improve Yemenis’ living conditions and assist government
reforms, according to the official news agency, SABA.
It came as Yemeni Prime
Minister Ahmed Awadh bin Mubarak arrived in Doha on Sunday to discuss Qatari
financial assistance to Yemen, particularly in the electricity sector.
“The government is looking for
new support from its brothers in the GCC countries,” a knowledgeable Yemeni
government official who requested anonymity told Arab News.
The Yemeni government has lost
almost 70 percent of its revenue since the Houthis attacked oil terminals in
the provinces of Shabwa and Hadramout, causing a complete halt to oil exports.
The Yemeni riyal has continued
to fall against the dollar, reaching about 1900 in government-controlled areas,
compared to 215 riyals in 2015.
Public employees, including
teachers and military personnel, have complained that their salaries have not
been increased and that they are paid late.
No comments:
Post a Comment