Yemen’s Houthi rebels attack Saudi’s Najran airport – again

Houthi fighters launch a new drone strike on an airport along the border with Saudi, as Riyadh says it shot it down.

Houthis
Houthi fighters stand guard during a rally to mark the third anniversary of their takeover of the capital, Sanaa [Hani Mohammed/AP]

Yemen‘s Houthi rebels said they targeted the airport in the Saudi Arabian city of Najran – the third attempt to hit the facility in a week.

The group’s Al Masirah TV reported the drone attack on Thursday came as the Houthis said they would step up their offensive against Saudi targets.

The Saudi-Emirati-led coalition fighting the armed group said the drone was intercepted by the kingdom’s air defences. 

“An explosive-laden drone sent by the terrorist Houthi militia to target Najran airport – which is used by thousands of civilians daily – was intercepted and destroyed by the Saudi air force,” coalition spokesman Colonel Turki al-Maliki was quoted by the Saudi Press Agency as saying.

Maliki also warned of a “response”, but did not elaborate.

The attack targeted a Patriot missile air defence system, Al Masirah TV said.

An armed drone sent on Tuesday hit a weapons depot at the same airport, setting off a blaze, according to Al Masirah.

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Attacks on Saudi Arabia had largely subsided since late last year amid United Nations-led peace efforts.

The conflict that began in late 2014 has killed tens of thousands of people, many of them civilians, relief agencies say. About 24.1 million – more than two-thirds of the population – are in need of aid.

‘Arms depot’

Najran, 840km southwest of Riyadh, lies on the Saudi-Yemen border and has repeatedly been targeted by the Houthis.

On Tuesday, Al Masirah reported the Yemeni group launched a bomb-laden drone to hit what it described as an “arms depot” at the Najran airport.

The rebels also claimed responsibility for last week’s drone attacks on oil assets in Saudi Arabia. On Sunday said they would attack 300 vital military targets in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.

The latest hostilities coincide with rising tensions between Iran and Gulf Arab states allied to the United States and come just as a sensitive, UN-sponsored peace deal is being carried out in Yemen’s main port of Hodeidah, a lifeline for millions.

The United Nations has described the war in Yemen as the world’s worst humanitarian disaster with millions facing famine and with disease rampant. 

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies