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Saudi Arabia intercepts missile fired from Yemen

19-5-2018 < RT 51 469 words
 

Saudi Arabia has managed to intercept a ballistic missile launched from Yemen into a “civilian area,” according to the Arab coalition. Houthi rebels meanwhile claimed they had targeted and successfully hit a Saudi military base.


Two ballistic missiles were fired on Saturday evening from Yemen into Saudi Arabia, allegedly targeting Khamis Mushait, a city in the south-west of the country, the coalition forces announced. One of the projectiles was reportedly destroyed by the Saudi air defense systems, while the other fell short of its intended target in the desert.


“No casualties were reported,” a spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition, Col. Turki Al-Malki, said in a statement, carried by the country’s official SPA news agency. “Launching ballistic missiles at densely populated civilian areas is a direct breach of the principles of the international humanitarian law.”



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Missile launched at Saudi capital, Houthis claim responsibility

Houthi forces in Yemen meanwhile confirmed firing a single 'Bader-1' solid fuel ballistic missile, claiming they were targeting a Saudi military and radar base in Khamis Mushait. “The missile hit the target precisely,” the Houthi military officials said in a statement, according to Yemen’s Saba news agency.


This is not the first time that the Houthis have targeted their northern neighbor which has waged a brutal military campaign in Yemen since March 2015, trying to restore former president Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi to power. All of the previous ballistic missile attacks, including Saturday's incident, have been blamed on Iran, which according to Riyadh is responsible for supplying weapons to its ‘proxy’. Tehran continues to deny any involvement in the attacks.


“This hostile act carried out by the Iranian Houthi militia proves that the Iranian regime is still providing the terrorist Houthi armed militia with qualitative capabilities...with the main objective of threatening the Saudi Arabian, regional and international security,” Al-Malki stressed in the statement.


The three years of Saudi-led bombardment and blockade of Yemen has led to a near-collapse of the country. Some 22 million people in Yemen, or 80 percent of the population, are in need of humanitarian aid, while more than half of the country is left without basic medical services.


READ MORE: US Green Berets covertly helping Saudi Arabia in Yemen – report


The UN officially documented 15,467 civilian casualties, with 5,974 killed and 9,493 injured, according to February figures. The Yemeni Ministry of Human Rights, however, places the number drastically higher, claiming that the Saudi-led campaign left around 600,000 civilians dead and injured. Human right groups have repeatedly accused the coalition of indiscriminate airstrikes, while criticizing the US and UK for supplying arms to Riyadh.


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