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News / Nation & World

Yemen: Fighting rages at Hodeida airport

Saudi-led coalition in battle for control of Red Sea port city

By AHMED AL-HAJ, Associated Press
Published: June 19, 2018, 9:34pm
3 Photos
This still image taken from video provided by Arab 24 shows Saudi-led forces gathering to retake the international airport of Yemen’s rebel-held port city of Hodeida from the Shiite Houthi rebels Saturday, June 16, 2018. With battles raging at the southern side of al-Hodeida International Airport, the military of Yemen’s exiled government said it had entirely seized the facility, and that engineers were working to clear mines from nearby areas just south of the city of some 600,000 people on the Red Sea.
This still image taken from video provided by Arab 24 shows Saudi-led forces gathering to retake the international airport of Yemen’s rebel-held port city of Hodeida from the Shiite Houthi rebels Saturday, June 16, 2018. With battles raging at the southern side of al-Hodeida International Airport, the military of Yemen’s exiled government said it had entirely seized the facility, and that engineers were working to clear mines from nearby areas just south of the city of some 600,000 people on the Red Sea. (Arab 24 via AP) Photo Gallery

SANAA, Yemen — Fierce fighting raged Tuesday outside the airport of the crucial Yemeni city of Hodeida as thousands of pro-government fighters backed by a Saudi-led coalition battled Iranian-allied Shiite rebels for control of the Red Sea port — the main passageway for food and aid supplies in a country teetering on the brink of famine.

Coalition officials, meanwhile, displayed weapons captured on the battlefield that they said show Iran is now arming the insurgents, known as Houthis, something Iran has long denied despite reports by the United Nations and Western countries linking it to the rebels’ arsenal.

The weapons, shown to reporters during a government-sponsored tour in the United Arab Emirates’ capital of Abu Dhabi and at an Emirati military base, included drones, a sniper rifle, roadside bombs disguised as rocks and a “drone boat,” which had been filled with explosives that failed to detonate.

Emirati officials said they included Iranian-labeled components inside equipment used to produce and load fuel for rockets the rebels have fired across the border at Saudi Arabia.

“We can say that these elements are military-grade materials imported from Iran to the Houthi militias,” Talal al-Teneiji, an Emirati Foreign Affairs Ministry official, told The Associated Press. Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The rare display came as the UAE-backed Amaleqa brigades, supported by airstrikes and naval shelling from the Saudi-led coalition, tried to storm the southern and western parts of the Hodeida airport. They faced fierce resistance from rebel snipers and land mines encircling the airport.

“It is a vast, open area and the Houthis have covered the ground with land mines to prevent the forces’ advancements,” one Yemeni military official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media. “It’s back and forth battles.”

Still, the official said it was a matter of hours before the forces would take full control of the airport.

The Amaleqa brigades have captured dozens of rebel fighters, including minors, in the airport fighting, the official said. Combat has been raging at the southern runway less than a mile from the main airport compound.

Witnesses said coalition warships and warplanes have been hitting the airport and the eastern side of Hodeida around the clock since late Monday, aiming to cut off the main road that links Hodeida and the rebel-held capital, Sanaa.

Government forces have been trying for days to capture the Kilo 16 road to trap the Houthi rebels inside Hodeida and the western coast, and block supplies from coming in from Sanaa.

The fighting has forced dozens of families to flee their homes.

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