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Saudi Arabian air force hits rebels in Yemen

By: arboofti send a private message
Lahore : Pakistan | 17 days ago  
Views: 33
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November 06, 2009

RIYADH (Reuters/AFP) - Saudi Arabia has launched heavy airstrikes on rebels in northern Yemen and is moving troops nearer the border after a raid into its territory by the insurgents, a Saudi government adviser said on Thursday.
Saudi government officials said only that the air force had bombed Yemeni rebels who had seized a border area inside the kingdom, which they said had now been recaptured. The officials said at least 40 rebels had been killed in the fighting.
The Yemeni government — which has long dismissed accusations by rebels that it has colluded with Saudi Arabia to combat them — denied that Saudi planes had struck across the border.
“Saudi Arabia did not hit targets in Yemen,” a Yemeni defence official told Reuters, declining further comment.
F-15 and Tornado jets have been bombing the positions of the Zaidi rebels near the border with southern Jizan province since Wednesday, an informed Saudi source told AFP.
“They’ve been hit hard and it’s ongoing,” he told AFP. “This is not a hit and run, this is a sustained action” that could involve a ground incursion into Yemen to “clean out” the rebel camps in coordination with Yemeni authorities, he said.
Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, has become increasingly anxious about instability and militancy in Yemen, which is also facing separatist sentiment in the south and a growing threat from resurgent Al-Qaeda fighters.
“As of yesterday late afternoon, Saudi airstrikes began on their positions in northern Yemen,” the adviser said, asking not to be named because operations were still going on.
“There have been successive airstrikes, very heavy bombardment of their positions, not just on the border, but on their main positions around Saada,” he said, alluding to the capital of the northern province where the rebels have been battling Yemen government forces since August.
Al Jazeera television quoted a rebel spokesman as saying the Saudi air force had raided six locations inside Yemen. One position had been hit by about 100 missiles in one hour.
Saudi Arabia said on Wednesday a security officer was killed and 11 were wounded in an attack by gunmen who had crossed the border from Yemen — the first such reported incursion since the long-running Houthi revolt flared up again in August.

The Saudi-owned Elaph website reported that a second soldier had died later from the same clash.
The Saudi government adviser said no decision had yet been taken to send troops across the border, but made clear Riyadh was no longer prepared to tolerate the Yemeni rebels.
“After what happened yesterday, it is clear they have lost track of reality and it has got to a point where there is no other way. They have got to be finished,” he said.
An Al-Qaeda group said on Thursday it was behind an ambush this week in which seven Yemeni security officials were killed.
The Shia rebels, known as Houthis after the family of their leader, have previously accused Saudi Arabia of backing Yemen’s armed forces in the conflict. Sanaa had denied this.
The rebels said on Wednesday they had taken control of the Jabal al-Dukhan area after defeating Saudi forces there.
Saudi Arabia was allowing the Yemeni army to use the mountainous area to launch attacks against them and they would take action if this continued, the rebels said.
Al Arabiya television reporter Mohammad al-Hasan, speaking by telephone from Jabal Dukhan, said fighting was in progress.
“We hear bullets and artillery from time to time and we see columns of smoke rising...There was intensive bombing by Saudi warplanes yesterday evening and this morning on Jabal Dukhan and some of the surrounding mountains...mainly to the east,” Hasan said, adding that the air raids had stopped several hours ago.
A Houthi statement said the raids had caused civilian casualties, but gave no details.
The 1,500 km (930 miles) border between Yemen and Saudi Arabia is a security worry for the kingdom, which is building a high-tech border fence to prevent infiltration.
Saudi Arabia and the United States fear the conflict in Yemen’s north and a separatist movement in the south will loosen already tenuous government control and empower Al-Qaeda. Such fears rose in August, when a Yemen-based suicide bomber posing as a repentant Al-Qaeda militant tried to kill Saudi Arabia’s counter-terrorism chief, a member of the royal family.

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