Yemen cross-border shelling kills Saudi child

A nine-year-old brother of the boy was also wounded when a rocket his their family's home, says official

Saudi soldiers load an artillery piece at a position close to the Saudi-Yemeni border. PHOTO: AFP

NAJRAN, SAUDI ARABIA:
A rocket fired from Yemen killed a three-year-old boy Saturday in the Saudi border region of Najran, a civil defence official said, in the latest cross-border attack by Iran-backed Yemeni rebels.

Major Ali al-Shahrani, civil defence spokesperson in  southwest Saudi Arabia, told reporters a nine-year-old brother of the boy was also wounded when a Katyusha rocket his their family's home.

The attack came a day after rockets fired from Yemen struck a power station in Najran, marking a rare hit on Saudi Arabia's infrastructure after months of periodic bombardment of the area.

Yemen's guerrilla war tests military ambitions of big-spending Saudis


Attacks have intensified since the suspension in early August of UN-brokered peace talks between the Shia Huthi rebels and their allies, and Yemen's internationally-recognised government which has the military support of a Saudi-led Arab coalition.

Ten people have been killed in Najran since August 16, when a single strike claimed seven lives.

The Arab coalition has also stepped up its air raids in Yemen since the peace talks collapsed.

The coalition intervened in March last year to support President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi after the Huthis and their allies seized much of Yemen.
Load Next Story