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Operation 'Decisive Storm' | Saudi lead coalition operations in Yemen - Updates & Discussions.

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While Saudi Arabia has been active in portraying its war in Yemen as one of liberation - a concerted effort to bring democracy and political self-determination to this poorest nation of the Arabian Peninsula, months of brutalities, indiscriminate bombings, war crimes and other aggravated human rights abuses are telling another story.

Religious Genocide - How Saudi Arabia in Yemen is seeking to destroy a chapter of Islam's history
 
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August 6, 2015

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Security members stand guard as passengers disembark the first civilian aircraft to land in Yemen's second city in more than four months, on August 6, 2015.


Aden receives first commercial flight in four months

Aden received its first commercial flight in four months on Thursday, bringing home refugees who had fled to Djibouti, while a Red Cross plane brought captured pro-government soldiers from Sanaa for the first prisoner exchange with Houthi rebels.

“At around 1pm local time, a Yemenia Airways plane arrived, carrying 150 citizens who had fled the city by boat to Djibouti back home,” said Muneef Al Zuhairi, a militia commander and deputy director of the city’s airport.

Airlines resuming flights to Aden will do so under the direct supervision of the Arab coalition, said Yemeni presidential spokesperson Moktar Al Rahbi.

Heavy fighting had rendered Aden’s airport and seaports mostly inaccessible after the Houthis pushed into the city on March 26, triggering a Saudi Arabia-led coalition of Arab states, including the UAE, to launch an attempt to restore the international recognised government of president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi.

However, the city was seized by fighters opposed to the Houthis last month, and the country’s exiled government in Saudi Arabia says it will use it as a base to run the country.

Tribal and military sources said on Thursday that Saudi Arabia had sent new military equipment including tanks into Yemen to support Hadi loyalists.

“Dozens of tanks, armoured vehicles and personnel carriers, as well as hundreds of Yemeni soldiers trained in Saudi Arabia, arrived in Yemen overnight” via the Wadia border post in the north of the country, a Yemeni military source said.

“These military reinforcements came from Saudi Arabia’s Sharura region and are intended for the popular resistance and the national army,” another military source said, referring to Mr Hadi’s forces.

Also on Thursday, a Red Cross plane landed in Aden carrying 30 southern fighters who had been detained on the battlefield and moved to Sanaa, Mr Al Zuhairi said. They will be exchanged for seven Houthi military commanders held in Aden.

It was the first prisoner exchange involving an international organisation and may signal progress toward ending the conflict which has killed more than 4,000 people.

Anti-Houthi forces continued to make gains on Thursday, fully surrounding the provincial capital of Lahej province, Zinjibar, north-east of Aden and massing their forces before an expected push toward the central city of Taez.

A Saudi Arabian soldier named Yahya Miteb Shamr was killed after being hit by a projectile in the country’s Jizan region along the border with Yemen, the coalition’s Joint Forces Command announced on Thursday.

Aden receives first commercial flight in months | The National
 
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August 6, 2015

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Security members stand guard as passengers disembark the first civilian aircraft to land in Yemen's second city in more than four months, on August 6, 2015.


Aden receives first commercial flight in four months

Aden received its first commercial flight in four months on Thursday, bringing home refugees who had fled to Djibouti, while a Red Cross plane brought captured pro-government soldiers from Sanaa for the first prisoner exchange with Houthi rebels.

“At around 1pm local time, a Yemenia Airways plane arrived, carrying 150 citizens who had fled the city by boat to Djibouti back home,” said Muneef Al Zuhairi, a militia commander and deputy director of the city’s airport.

Airlines resuming flights to Aden will do so under the direct supervision of the Arab coalition, said Yemeni presidential spokesperson Moktar Al Rahbi.

Heavy fighting had rendered Aden’s airport and seaports mostly inaccessible after the Houthis pushed into the city on March 26, triggering a Saudi Arabia-led coalition of Arab states, including the UAE, to launch an attempt to restore the international recognised government of president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi.

However, the city was seized by fighters opposed to the Houthis last month, and the country’s exiled government in Saudi Arabia says it will use it as a base to run the country.

Tribal and military sources said on Thursday that Saudi Arabia had sent new military equipment including tanks into Yemen to support Hadi loyalists.

“Dozens of tanks, armoured vehicles and personnel carriers, as well as hundreds of Yemeni soldiers trained in Saudi Arabia, arrived in Yemen overnight” via the Wadia border post in the north of the country, a Yemeni military source said.

“These military reinforcements came from Saudi Arabia’s Sharura region and are intended for the popular resistance and the national army,” another military source said, referring to Mr Hadi’s forces.

Also on Thursday, a Red Cross plane landed in Aden carrying 30 southern fighters who had been detained on the battlefield and moved to Sanaa, Mr Al Zuhairi said. They will be exchanged for seven Houthi military commanders held in Aden.

It was the first prisoner exchange involving an international organisation and may signal progress toward ending the conflict which has killed more than 4,000 people.

Anti-Houthi forces continued to make gains on Thursday, fully surrounding the provincial capital of Lahej province, Zinjibar, north-east of Aden and massing their forces before an expected push toward the central city of Taez.

A Saudi Arabian soldier named Yahya Miteb Shamr was killed after being hit by a projectile in the country’s Jizan region along the border with Yemen, the coalition’s Joint Forces Command announced on Thursday.

Aden receives first commercial flight in months | The National
well like to see it continue after the Al-Qaeda captured Aden
 
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In this photo taken on Aug. 3, 2015, tanks and armored vehicles belonging to fighters against Shiite rebels known as Houthis gather on a road leading to Al-Anad base near Aden in the southern province of Lahej, Yemen.(Photo: Wael Qubady/AP)
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Yemeni forces take last rebel-held army base in south
SANAA, Yemen — Saudi-backed Yemeni officials say pro-government forces have retaken the last military base in the country's south that was held by Shiite rebels known as Houthis.

The officials say Friday's capture of Labouza base is the latest victory for the pro-government forces that have been pushing north in the province of Lahj, after routing the rebels from the coastal city of Aden recently.

Labouza lies north of the strategic al-Anad base, which fell to Yemeni troops on Monday. The officials gave no casualty figures for the latest fighting. They spoke on condition of anonymity under regulations.

The gains by the pro-government forces have been made possible with the help of a Saudi-led and U.S.-backed coalition that has been targeting the Iran-backed Houthis and their allies since March in an airstrikes campaign.
 
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In this photo taken on Aug. 3, 2015, tanks and armored vehicles belonging to fighters against Shiite rebels known as Houthis gather on a road leading to Al-Anad base near Aden in the southern province of Lahej, Yemen.(Photo: Wael Qubady/AP)
635745443192586534-Mideast-Yemh.jpg

Yemeni forces take last rebel-held army base in south
SANAA, Yemen — Saudi-backed Yemeni officials say pro-government forces have retaken the last military base in the country's south that was held by Shiite rebels known as Houthis.

The officials say Friday's capture of Labouza base is the latest victory for the pro-government forces that have been pushing north in the province of Lahj, after routing the rebels from the coastal city of Aden recently.

Labouza lies north of the strategic al-Anad base, which fell to Yemeni troops on Monday. The officials gave no casualty figures for the latest fighting. They spoke on condition of anonymity under regulations.

The gains by the pro-government forces have been made possible with the help of a Saudi-led and U.S.-backed coalition that has been targeting the Iran-backed Houthis and their allies since March in an airstrikes campaign.
Ask our israeli friends how many anti tank mussile have been fired at them in 2006 lebanon war.and if such thing happened at yemen then com and talk about iran backed.
 
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August 7, 2015

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Yemeni troops take last rebel-held army base in south
Pro-government forces retake last military base in south held by Houthi rebels

Saudi-backed Yemeni officials say pro-government forces have retaken the last military base in the country's south that was held by Shiite rebels known as Houthis.

The officials say Friday's capture of Labouza base is the latest victory for the pro-government forces that have been pushing north in the province of Lahj, after routing the rebels from the coastal city of Aden recently.

Labouza lies north of the strategic al-Anad base, which fell to Yemeni troops on Monday. The officials gave no casualty figures for the latest fighting. They spoke on condition of anonymity under regulations.

The gains by the pro-government forces have been made possible with the help of a Saudi-led and U.S.-backed coalition that has been targeting the Iran-backed Houthis and their allies since March in an airstrikes campaign.
Saudi soldier killed in shelling
Meanwhile, a Saudi soldier was reportedly killed by shelling from across the Yemeni border on Friday, becoming the third death this week, the official SPA news agency reported.

The National Guard serviceman was killed in the Najran region, in the southwest, said the Saudi-led coalition carrying out air strikes against Al Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Another soldier died from shelling along the border on Wednesday, and a civilian was killed in Najran three days earlier.

The latest cross-border barrages coincide with advances since late July by pro-government fighters who recaptured the southern city of Aden from the Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

On Tuesday. they also took back Al-Anad airbase north of Aden, using heavy armour supplied by the coalition after hundreds of Gulf Arab troops landed in the port city to bolster the fightback.

The Saudi soldier brings the number of people killed in shelling and skirmishes along the frontier with Yemen to more than 50 since the coalition campaign began on March 26.

Most of the casualties have been soldiers.

In Yemen, the United Nations says the war has killed nearly 4,000 people, half of them civilians.

Yemeni troops take last rebel-held army base in south | GulfNews.com
 
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Last Updated: Saturday, August 8, 2015 - 01:47
17 killed by Huthi mines in south Yemen: Military | Zee News

Aden: Seventeen civilians were killed and dozens wounded by explosions of mines planted by retreating Shiite Huthi rebels from the southern Yemeni province of Lahj, military sources said Friday.


They said most of the casualties were civilians returning to their homes, including in provincial capital Huta.

The Iran-backed rebels fled after forces loyal to exiled president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi retook large parts of the southern province.

Loyalists have regained the upper hand in the south, after recapturing second city Aden last month and the key Al-Anad airbase to its north earlier this week.

A passenger plane of national carrier Yemenia landed Friday in Aden from Djibouti, carrying 180 Yemenis returning home, airport director Tareq Abdu told AFP.

An Emirati plane also arrived late on Thursday, he said, carrying navigation equipment to rehabilitate the airport, which was partly destroyed in fighting.

AFP

Ask our israeli friends how many anti tank mussile have been fired at them in 2006 lebanon war.and if such thing happened at yemen then com and talk about iran backed.

According to reports, 52 Merkava main battle tanks were damaged (45 of them by different kinds of ATGM), missiles penetrated 22 tanks.
 
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Last Updated: Saturday, August 8, 2015 - 01:47
17 killed by Huthi mines in south Yemen: Military | Zee News

Aden: Seventeen civilians were killed and dozens wounded by explosions of mines planted by retreating Shiite Huthi rebels from the southern Yemeni province of Lahj, military sources said Friday.


They said most of the casualties were civilians returning to their homes, including in provincial capital Huta.

The Iran-backed rebels fled after forces loyal to exiled president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi retook large parts of the southern province.

Loyalists have regained the upper hand in the south, after recapturing second city Aden last month and the key Al-Anad airbase to its north earlier this week.

A passenger plane of national carrier Yemenia landed Friday in Aden from Djibouti, carrying 180 Yemenis returning home, airport director Tareq Abdu told AFP.

An Emirati plane also arrived late on Thursday, he said, carrying navigation equipment to rehabilitate the airport, which was partly destroyed in fighting.

AFP



According to reports, 52 Merkava main battle tanks were damaged (45 of them by different kinds of ATGM), missiles penetrated 22 tanks.
ask Israeli member how many ATGM simultaneously had hit some of those Merkava and how many fired at the tanks in Yemen.
 
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Iran houtis are friendly but i dont think too much deep
because if it was too deep there would have been a lot of shooting fight in aden in yemen
 
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This war is not going anywhere good, it will only end up in a major blood bath and a failed state in the end.
 
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August 8, 2015

3 Emiratis killed in Operation Restoring Hope in Yemen
First Corporals part of Operation Restoring Hope, being carried out by Saudi-led coalition

The General Command of the UAE Armed Forces mourned the martyrdom of three Emirati officers in Yemen.

They were killed while performing their national duty as part of the Armed Forces' involvement in Operation Restoring Hope being carried out by the Saudi-led Arab coalition to support the legitimate government of Yemen.

The martyrs are First Corporal Juma Jawaher Juma Al Hammadi, First Corporal Khalid Mohammad Abdullah Al Shehi, and First Corporal Saeed Ahmad Al Habsi.

The Armed Forces’ General Command offered condolences to the families of the martyrs and asked Allah Almighty to place them in paradise and grant their families the patience and solace to bear the loss.

3 Emiratis killed in Operation Restoring Hope in Yemen | GulfNews.com

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August 8, 2015

Three Emirati soldiers killed during operations in Yemen

The UAE is mourning three more Emirati soldiers who have lost their lives in Operation Restoring Hope.

Juma Jawhar Juma Al Hammadi, Khalid Mohammed Abdullah Al Shehhi and Fahim Saeed Ahmed Al Habsi, all first corporals, were killed on Saturday in Yemen.

The General Headquarters of the Armed Forces offered condolences to the families of the three men.

Six Emiratis have now died in the Saudi-led operation aimed at driving out Houthi rebels and restoring to power the internationally recognised government of president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi.

In June, a non-commissioned officer, Hazim Obaid Al Ali, 40, died in Saudi Arabia during training exercises for the conflict. Another non-commissioned officer Saif Youssef Ahmed Al Falasi, 35, a father of five from Dubai, and Lt Abdul Aziz Sarhan Saleh Al Kaabi, from Al Ain, were killed on duty last month in Yemen.

On the ground yesterday, Hadi loyalist forces continued to make gains in their push northwards after they drove the Iranian-backed rebels out of the southern port city of Aden last month, and last week recaptured the key military airbase of Al Anad 60 kilometres to the north.

Strengthened by tanks supplied by the Arab coalition, they launched a two-pronged drive from the north and south to retake Zinjibar, the rebel-held capital of the southern province of Abyan.

The tanks were part of a coalition package including other armoured vehicles, personnel carriers and hundreds of Yemeni soldiers trained in the kingdom.

At least 22 people, mostly returning civilians, have been killed in the past three days by booby-trap mines planted by retreating Houthis in Aden and Lahj provinces.

Six people also died yesterday when fighting erupted between local residents and Houthi forces in the Hazem Al Adeen area of Ibb province. In Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city, four civilians were killed and six injured in clashes between Houthi and pro-Hadi fighters.

In the capital, Sanaa, which is still under rebel control, the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross arrived yesterday for a three-day visit to assess the “dire humanitarian situation”.

He is expected to meet Houthi leaders and their renegade military allies loyal to the ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The United Nations says nearly 4,000 people have been killed since March, half of them civilians, and 80 per cent of Yemen’s 21 million people are in need of aid and protection. The Red Cross says 1.3 million Yemenis have been displaced by the conflict, and four Red Cross volunteers have been killed.

“The human cost of this conflict is such that no family in Yemen today has been left unaffected,” Mr Mauer said.

“We are particularly concerned about attacks on medical facilities and personnel. Moreover, deliveries of food, water and medicine must be facilitated, not hampered.”

It was not clear if Mr Mauer would visit Aden, where aid from the UN and the UAE has been arriving by sea and air since the rebels were driven out.

Three Emirati soldiers killed during operations in Yemen | The National
 
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