Yemen calm as ceasefire takes hold

Coalition spokesman Major General Ahmed Assiri accused the Iran-backed rebels of 180 violations of the truce

People ride a motorbike in front of a building destroyed by a recent Saudi-led air strike in the northwestern city of Saada, Yemen November 16, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

Violence subsided Sunday in Yemen, a day after the beginning of a 48-hour ceasefire declared by the pro-government Arab coalition battling rebel fighters for almost 20 months.

An AFP correspondent in Sanaa said there had not been any air strikes in the rebel-held capital by warplanes of the Saudi-led coalition since the ceasefire entered into effect at midday (0900 GMT) on Saturday.

The flashpoint southwestern city of Taez was also calm after fierce clashes on Saturday between government forces and the Huthi rebels and their allies of renegade troops loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, a military official said.

Arab coalition declares 48-hour Yemen truce


The official spoke of "limited exchange of fire" in the city where heavy gunbattles this week killed dozens of people. Meanwhile, the coalition said its air defences destroyed three ballistic missiles fired at dawn by the Shiite rebels at Marib province, east of Sanaa, a military official said.

Coalition spokesman Major General Ahmed Assiri accused the Iran-backed rebels of 180 violations of the truce in 10 hours after it took effect. He said 150 breaches took place in Yemen, while 30 others were along the northern border with Saudi Arabia, according to Al-Jazeera news network.

The ceasefire comes after US Secretary of State John Kerry this week met rebel representatives in Oman and also urged the government to come on board. At first the government rejected the peace bid, saying it had not been consulted. But it has come under huge pressure to back down in the face of an international outcry over the mounting civilian death toll from 20 months of conflict.

OIC condemns Houthi missile strike on Makkah

More than 7,000 people have been killed in Yemen and nearly 37,000 wounded since the coalition intervention began in March last year, the UN says.
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