People
stand amidst the rubble of houses destroyed by an overnight Saudi-led
air strike on a residential area in Yemen’s capital Sanaa May 1, 2015.
REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah
Warplanes from a Saudi-led coalition struck a residential district of
the Yemeni capital Sanaa overnight, killing eight to 10 civilians,
residents said on Friday. Reuters report:
The Saba state news agency, controlled by the Houthi
movement in charge of Sanaa, put the death toll in the Sawan district at
20 and said more than 50 people had been wounded. It said casualties
included woman and children. Warplanes also struck a military airbase
near the capital.
Saba said medics rushed to Sawan to try to rescue residents trapped
under the rubble of homes. The strikes came days after jets bombed the
runway to stop an Iranian aid plane landing. Damage to the airport has
stopped aid deliveries, officials said.
Saudi Arabia believes the Houthi group is a proxy its regional rival
Iran, and Saudi backing for the resistance in Yemen’s mostly Sunni
Muslim south has raised fears that Yemen could descend into all-out
sectarian war.
The Houthis hail from Yemen’s far north and belong to the Zaydi sect
of Shi’ite Islam. They swept into the capital Sanaa in September and
pushed south and east, saying they were winning a revolution against
Sunni militants and corrupt officials.
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