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Sunday, April 19, 2015
Houthis reject UN resolution on Yemen

Houthis reject UN resolution on Yemen
Coalition airstrikes target Presidential Palace in Taiz taken over by Houthi
militias
Arafat Madabish Asharq Al-Awsat Sunday, 19 Apr, 2015
http://www.aawsat.net/2015/04/article55342995/houthis-reject-un-resolution-on-yemen

Sana’a, Aden and Riyadh, Asharq Al-Awsat—The Iran-backed Shi’ite Houthi
movement has rejected the recent UN resolution targeting the group, which is
currently in de facto control of the country after launching a coup in
February.

In its first official reaction to the Security Council’s Resolution 2216,
which last Tuesday imposed an embargo on the sale of arms to the Houthis and
their ally, ousted former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, the movement said in
a statement on Saturday that the Council’s decision “must be opposed by all
means.”

It also condemned the UN’s support for what it called an “act of aggression”
against the country—in reference to ongoing Saudi-led airstrikes targeting
the Houthis in Yemen.

In addition to the arms embargo, the resolution also slapped global asset
freezes and travel bans on Saleh and his son, Ahmed, as well as a number of
top Houthi figures, including one of the movement’s leaders, Abdul Malik
Al-Houthi.

The movement said it rejected the placing of any Houthi figure “or Yemeni
citizen on sanctions lists under Chapter VII [of the UN Charter]”—which
allows the Security Council to take action, whether military or
non-military, against any group or individual who threatens the peace and
security of a member state.

“The decision [Resolution 2216] is unjust, supports the oppressor against
the oppressed, and is biased towards this coalition which targets the people
of Yemen,” the statement said, referring to the Saudi-led coalition, known
as Operation Decisive Storm.

The UN should instead have imposed sanctions against “the murderers and
vampires who are killing and besieging an entire population, as well as
violating their sovereignty and dignity,” the statement continued, once
again referring to the Saudi-led coalition.

Operation Decisive Storm, launched by Saudi Arabia and its allies on March
5, came as a result of calls for military intervention in Yemen by the
country’s internationally recognized President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, whose
legitimacy was reiterated in last week’s resolution.

In recent days the coalition has intensified airstrikes on the port city of
Aden, where Houthi militias have been seeking to obtain a southern foothold
in the country in similar fashion to their takeover of the capital Sana’a
last September, when they occupied government institutions and buildings as
well as various military installments.

Their advance on Aden, however, has been blocked by local armed tribal and
volunteer groups loyal to Hadi, who have been aided by the ongoing
airstrikes.

Local sources told Asharq Al-Awsat on Saturday that the strikes had been
especially intensified during the last 48 hours, and have been targeting the
movement of weapons and military supplies by the Shi’ite group into the city
as well as areas where they had moved such supplies in previous weeks.

The sources said the Houthis and aides of former president Saleh in the
military and security establishments—who have eased the Houthi advance
across the country—had hidden these supplies in civilian locations,
including some of the city’s schools.

In his daily briefing on the progress of the strikes, Saudi Defense Ministry
spokesman Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri told reporters gathered at the Riyadh
Airbase on Saturday that the coalition was continuing to back local forces
on the ground which supported the legitimacy of President Hadi.

They have now been joined by the Yemeni Army’s 35th Brigade, who were
formerly loyal to Saleh and the Houthis but have now switched sides to fight
alongside local tribes and volunteer groups in Aden against the Shi’ite
movement.

Asiri said these forces have now “achieved major advances on the ground in
Aden and are beginning to locate weapons storage areas” belonging to the
Houthis, who have placed their supplies in residential areas, including
inside civilians’ homes.

In addition to strikes on Aden, coalition forces have also been targeting
the Presidential Palace in the southern governorate of Taiz, which lies 111
miles (179 kilometers) northwest of Aden. Asiri said the Houthis have been
using the palace as a base from which to launch attacks in the province and
to store weapons and military equipment.

Coalition airstrikes also continued targeting the Houthis’ traditional
northern stronghold of Saada, where they are supporting military units from
the Yemeni Army on the ground against the Houthi militias.

Asiri also made mention of a possible “terrorist attack” which the Houthis
are planning to launch against Saudi border guards stationed on the boundary
between the Kingdom and Yemen. Saudi border guards have been targeted by
Houthi militias since the conflict began, leading to several deaths and
injuries.

Exchanges of fire had taken place in recent days between the border guards
and Houthi militias, leading to the death of one member of the Saudi
military, Asiri revealed.

“The Houthi militias are attempting to draw coalition forces into a ground
operation,” he said, adding that members of the alliance would not be
intimidated by any Houthi aggression into altering their planned operations.

Mohamed Ali Mohsen and Nasser Al-Haqbani contributed additional reporting
from Aden and Riyadh.

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