UAE forces bomb Yemen rebels after coalition troop deaths (original) (raw)
The United Arab Emirates has bombarded Yemeni rebels with airstrikes after 50 people, including 45 soldiers, were killed in the deadliest day yet for a Saudi-led coalition fighting the insurgents.
Emirati officials vowed that the deaths in a missile attack in the eastern province of Marib would not weaken their commitment to the coalition’s mission to restore exiled president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to power. The missile hit an arms depot, triggering huge explosions that the exiled government said also killed five Bahraini coalition troops.
The UAE denounced the attack as cowardly, but the Shia Houthi rebels hailed it as revenge for six months of deadly coalition airstrikes.
The coalition launched its air war when Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia in March after the rebels entered his last refuge, Yemen’s second city of Aden.
After his loyalists recaptured the southern port city in July, the coalition launched a ground operation that has seen the rebels pushed back from five southern provinces, although they still control the capital, Sana’a, and much of the north and centre.
UAE troops have played a leading role in the operation and seven had already been killed in the fighting.
But Friday’s losses were the heaviest since the formation of the UAE in 1971 and, as the bodies of the dead were flown home on Saturday, the country began three days of mourning.
UAE warplanes retaliated with pre-dawn bombing raids against the rebels in Marib and Sana’a on Saturday, as well as on their stronghold of Saada in the far north and the central city of Ibb, state media reported.
Coalition aircraft unleashed waves of airstrikes on the capital from the early hours, sowing panic among residents. “These are the heaviest airstrikes that Sana’a has endured,” a local official said.
The streets remained deserted as the bombing continued into the daylight hours.
Coalition warplanes also bombed the rebel position from which the missile is believed to have been fired, a local official and witnesses said.
The Baihan district of Shabwa province, which borders Marib, is one of the rebels’ last redoubts in the south.
In the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi, an honour guard stood by as comrades carried the coffins of the dead soldiers off a military aircraft at Al-Bateen airport.
“A cowardly attack will not deter us, nor will it stop us from realising our goals,” said the foreign affairs minister, Anwar Gargash.
Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, head of the Emirati armed forces, vowed that “these events will only make us more steadfast in our stand for justice”.
The Houthis said they had fired a Tochka missile at the Safer camp in Marib. They hailed the strike as “revenge for the crimes and the war of extermination being carried out by the Saudi aggressor and its mercenaries”.
The province is the location of Yemen’s main oilfields and has seen fierce fighting in recent weeks as loyalist forces and their coalition allies have advanced north.
Loyalist military sources said the coalition had sent reinforcements to the Safer base this week, including tanks, armoured vehicles, troop carriers, rocket launchers and Apache helicopters.
The extra equipment and troops were intended to boost “the counter-offensive launched by loyalist forces and the coalition to advance on Sana’a”, one military official said.
Friday’s coalition losses came as Saudi King Salman held talks with Barack Obama in Washington, during which Yemen featured high on the agenda.
The US president said the two sides shared concerns about the need to restore a functioning government in Yemen and relieve the humanitarian crisis gripping the country.
More than 4,500 people have been killed in the conflict, including hundreds of children, according to the United Nations, which has warned that the impoverished country is on the brink of famine.
The US has supported the coalition effort, but repeatedly warned about the impact of the fighting on civilians.
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, telephoned his UAE counterpart, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan, to express his condolences.