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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, January 27, 2020
Fighting escalates in Yemen since Houthi mosque attack
The escalation has caused Hadi loyalists to consider pulling out of a UN-brokered peace agreement

Saudi-backed forces loyal to Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi claim to have made advances near Yemen's capital, Sanaa (AFP)
Fighting between Saudi-backed forces loyal to internationally recognised
president Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi and the Houthis near Sanaa, Yemen's
capital, has intensified after a Houthi airstrike on a mosque killed
more than 100 people in Marib last week.
Hadi loyalists say they have made advances in the district of Nehm,
which lies just 60km to the northeast of Sanaa, a claim that has been
rejected by the Houthis, who hold the capital city.
The fighting has escalated to the point that Hadi loyalists are
considering pulling out of the UN-sponsored Stockholm agreement, which
halted military operations in the key port of Hodeidah, easing a
blockade that led to widespread famine and a cholera outbreak.
'One missile targeted the mosque': More than 100 Yemeni soldiers killed in attack on camp
Read More »
Fighting broke out on 16 January as pro-Hadi forces advanced on Nehm,
backed with air support from the Saudi-led coalition, which rights
groups say had been responsible for thousands of civilian deaths.
The clashes have forced families to flee and wounded dozens, according
to reports, as violence returned to the district after nearly a year of
relative calm.
Nehm is considered to be a strategic gateway to Sanaa, which was
captured by the Iran-alligned Houthis in 2014, leading to a war that has
killed over 100,000 people and created one of the world's worst
humanitarian crisis.
The fighting intensified after a Houthi missile attack on a mosque
inside a military base in the central province of Marib killed at least
116 Yemeni government troops last weekend.
Abdulrazaq, a pro-Hadi fighter, told Middle East Eye: "After the Houthis
attacked the mosque and killed more than 100 soldiers, our leadership
was convinced that there is no solution but to attack the Houthis
fiercely."
The operation orginated in the city of Marib, which in recent months has
become a pro-Hadi stronghold where pro-Hadi groups from northern and
southern Yemen have coalesced, settling their differences and vowing to
fight the Houthis.
Mostly controlled by Islah (Muslim Brotherhood), which has opposed the
Houthis, the city has become a haven for soldiers fleeing infighting
between Saudi and UAE-backed groups, as well as others escaping
a Houthi onslaught, in which they claimed to have killed or captured
more than 2,000 soldiers in August. The city lies 120km east of Sanaa.
After the Houthis attacked the mosque and killed more than 100 soldiers, our leadership was convinced that there is no solution but to attack the Houthis fiercelyAbdulrazaq, pro-Hadi soldier
Abdulrazaq, who fled to Marib in August after members of his unit
deployed to the border with Saudi Arabia were captured by the Houthis,
told Middle East Eye that pro-Hadi fighters in the city had been pushing
to launch an operation to take Sanaa for months.
"We have been insisting on the leadership to allow us to launch an
attack on the Houthis in Sanaa's Nehm district and finally they agreed
last week," he said.
"If we take over Sanaa the other provinces will be captured easily."
'Huge advance'
Abdu Abdullah Magli, spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces, said on
Wednesday that the army had broken through Houthi defences and were
advancing towards the district of Arhab, north of Sanaa.
For their part, the Houthis have rejected claims by pro-Hadi forces that
they have penetrated into Nehm, but admitted they were facing a "huge
advance" of pro-Hadi forces.
The spokesperson of the Houthis, army brigadier Yahiya Sarie, tweeted on
17 January: "The heroes of the army and the Popular Committees
[militias] confronted huge advance of the aggressive forces in Nehm."
A Houthi leader in Sanaa accused Hadi loyalists of spreading misinformation about their advances.
"The media outlets of mercenaries [pro-Hadi media] used to talk about
false victories, and by the end of the battle the truth emerges and the
people realise that these were really the lies of mercenaries.
"Ansarallah [the Houthis] are patient, and they do not talk about
advances officially until the end of the battle, so they do not talk
about Nehm nowadays."
MEE has not been able to independently verify whether advances have been made by either side.
'No solution but force'
The escalation has prompted both sides to blame each other for putting
an end to peace efforts. Signed by the warring parties in 2018, the
Stockholm agreement was largely viewed as a step towards a final
settlement.
But Foreign Affairs Minister Mohamed Al-Hadhrami has now called into question the agreement itself, threatening to pull out.
"The Houthi militias are the only [party] responsible for the collapse
of peace efforts and the failure of Stockholm agreement,” he said last
week.
In light of this escalation, we no longer see a real point in the Hodeidah agreementForeign Affairs Minister Mohamed Al-Hadhrami
He added through the Twitter account of the ministry: "In light of this
escalation, we no longer see a real point in the Hodeidah [Stockholm]
agreement."
Ared al-Adimi, a pro-Houthi leader, said that the agreement had failed and that there was now "no solution but force".
"The escalation in Nehm and the violation of the Stockholm agreement is
enough to resume fighting them, and we will do that until the liberation
of the whole country."
