Yemen’s rebel chief vows no surrender as govt forces push into port

Published November 8, 2018
HODEIDA: Yemeni pro-government forces advance towards the port area on Tuesday. — AFP
HODEIDA: Yemeni pro-government forces advance towards the port area on Tuesday. — AFP

SANAA: Yemen’s rebel chief vowed on Wednesday he would never surrender to Saudi-backed pro-government forces, as international aid groups appealed for safe passage for civilians caught in the flashpoint port of Hodeida.

After six days of intense battles, pro-government forces on Wednesday pressed even closer to the heart of Hodeida, the Red Sea city controlled by the Houthi rebels and under blockade by Saudi Arabia and its allies.

Plumes of smoke were seen billowing from the horizon on Tuesday as heavily armed pro-government forces moved towards the port on foot and on the back of pickup trucks.

The coalition, an alliance led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, had sent fighter jets and Apache attack helicopters to cover Yemeni troops fighting rebels on the ground, a pro-government military source told AFP.

In a lengthy televised speech from an undisclosed location, the country’s rebel chief appeared to admit the alliance had made headway into Hodeida.

International aid groups have appealed to both the rebels and the alliance to allow civilians to escape the densely-populated city of 600,000 people.

The International Committee of the Red Cross appealed for the warring parties to “spare civilians and civilian infrastructure” including ambulances, hospitals, electricity and water plants.

Rebel chief Abdul Malik al-Houthi on Wednesday acknowledged he was outnumbered, but appeared undaunted even while appearing to admit to incursions by the Saudi-led coalition.

“The enemy benefits from its numbers, which it has increased even further to pressure the city of Hodeida,” Malik said.

“Does the enemy think that penetrating this or that area, or seizing this or that area, means we will be convinced that we should surrender and hand over control? “This is not happening and will not happen ever.”

One of the city’s biggest hospitals, Al-Thawra, is now only “metres away from an active frontline”, said International Committee of the Red Cross spokeswoman Mirella Hodeib, speaking from the Yemeni capital.

Juliette Touma, spokeswoman for the UN children’s fund (Unicef), said: “We’re talking about dying children who are currently at the hospital.

“What we are fearful about is that the escalation of violence is highly likely to jeopardise humanitarian efforts that are life-saving,” she said, warning the already dire situation would likely worsen.

Hassan Basha, a security advisor with Save the Children in Sanaa, said his group was treating five children for wounds sustained from the fighting. A sixth, the 15-year-old boy, had died, Basha said.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) on Wednesday announced it had suspended its work in the Daleh region, east of Hodeida province.

Published in Dawn, November 8th, 2018

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