(Reuters) - Heavy
fighting between Iranian-allied Houthi militia and local tribesmen
killed at least 15 people in Yemen's oil-producing Marib province and an
air strike targeted the home of a senior Houthi official, residents and
tribal and medical sources said. Yemeni Vice President Khaled
Bahah had called on the Houthis on Monday to heed a U.N. Security
Council demand for an end to fighting. The conflict has pushed Yemen
into a humanitarian "catastrophe", according to the Red Cross. Houthis
seized the capital Sanaa last September, demanding a more inclusive
government and crackdown on graft. Talks with President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi collapsed and he fled into exile. Chaos set in as Houthi
forces swept southwards, fighting loyalist army units, regional tribes
and al Qaeda militants. Top world
oil exporter Saudi Arabia, rattled by what it sees as expanding Iranian
influence in the region, has been leading a Gulf Arab coalition in
waging air strikes on Houthi targets since late March. Riyadh announced a
halt to its campaign last week, but fighting has intensified again
since Sunday. In Sanaa, airport
officials said that Saudi-led warplanes had struck a civilian aircraft
operated by Yemeni Felix Airways, setting it ablaze, as well as a cargo
plane. The runway was also damaged in the air raid, the officials said. Earlier
on Tuesday, Saudi-led jets bombed a private villa that nearby residents
said belonged to Abdullah Yahya Hakim, a senior Houthi official who was
among a number of officials blacklisted by the U.N. Security Council in
November. There were no immediate reports of casualties from the strikes on the airport or Hakim's residence. Local
residents further reported heavy clashes overnight in Marib province
east of Sanaa, in the major city of Taiz in central Yemen, and in the
southern port city of Aden. At least 15 people were killed in the district
of Sirwah and around Marib city, the sources said, as tribesmen allied
with Hadi tried to stop Houthis and troops loyal to former president Ali
Abdullah Saleh from advancing on the provincial capital. The
Houthis say their advance on Marib is to flush out militants belonging
to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), one of the most active
branches of the Sunni Muslim militant network and an enemy of the
Shi'ite Muslim Houthis. As the
civil war rages on and the impoverished country sinks deeper into a
humanitarian emergency, Yemenis warn that it will get ever harder to
restore credible central state authority, raising the risk to nearby oil
shipping lanes. VICE PRESIDENT PLEADS FOR NEGOTIATED SOLUTION The
fighting has doubled the number of people displaced by the violence
from the previous estimate of 150,000 on April 17, the U.N. humanitarian
agency OCHA said on Tuesday. Speaking
in Saudi Arabia on Monday, Vice President Bahah said Yemenis should
seek a negotiated way out of the crisis based on a U.N. Security Council
resolution passed in April. The
Houthis have already rejected the resolution, which imposes an arms
embargo on them and on Saleh's supporters, calls on them to lay down
their weapons and to leave Yemen's cities. "The
brothers in Ansarullah are called on to fear God ... and to stop their
war on the cities," Bahah said, according to Yemeni news website
www.voice-yemen.com. Ansarullah is the group's official name. Bahah
is popular among many of Yemen's feuding parties, and his appointment
earlier this month created some hope that a negotiated solution could be
reached. In addition to bread and
medical supplies running short, telecommunications could be cut within
days due to fuel shortages, the state-run news agency Saba reported,
quoting the director of the telecommunications authority. The
United Nations children's fund, UNICEF, said on Tuesday that it had
delivered urgent medical supplies for more than 500,000 people, mostly
women and children, in Yemen for the next three months. A UNICEF
statement said the supplies, which arrived by boat in Aden, will be used
in several provinces including Aden, al-Dhalea, Lahj, Abyan and Shabwa.
Houthis, tribesmen battle in central Yemen, 15 killed
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Reuters
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