Global briefing
- News that Mahmoud al Mabhouh, a leading member of Hamas's military wing, the Ezzedine al Qassam Brigades, was murdered in Dubai 11 days ago, has quickly prompted speculation that Israel was behind the killing.
You make the news
Send us your stories and pictures
Saudi air force bombs Yemen rebels
- Last Updated: November 05. 2009 8:10PM UAE / November 5. 2009 4:10PM GMT
DUBAI // The Saudi air force is attacking rebel strongholds in northern Yemen after rebels killed two Saudi security men on the border, the Saudi-owned, London-based Elaph website reported today.
However, Saudi government officials said only that the air force had bombed rebels who had seized a border area inside Saudi Arabia, which they said Saudi forces had now recaptured. The officials said at least 40 rebels had been killed in the fighting.
Al Jazeera television quoted a rebel spokesman as saying the Saudi air force had raided six locations inside Yemen, followed by a heavy attack on one position which had been hit by about 100 missiles in one hour.
There was no official confirmation from Riyadh or the Yemeni capital Sanaa of cross-border Saudi air strikes.
Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, has become increasingly anxious about instability and militancy in Yemen, which is also facing separatist sentiment in the south and a growing threat from al Qa’eda militancy.
An al Qa’eda group claimed responsibility today for the killing of seven Yemeni security officials in an ambush near the Saudi border this week.
Elaph, in an unsourced report monitored by the BBC, said Saudi ground forces were also moving towards the border area, but did not say any troops had crossed into Yemen.
The Shiite rebels, known as Houthis after the family of their leader, have previously accused Saudi Arabia of backing Yemen’s armed forces in the conflict. Sanaa had denied this.
The Houthis said on their website late yesterday that Saudi planes had struck four locations using phosphorus bombs.
Saudi Arabia said yesterday a security officer was killed and 11 were wounded in an attack by gunmen who had crossed the border from Yemen – the first such reported incursion since the long-running Houthi revolt flared up again in August.
Elaph said another soldier had died later from the same clash, which it said occurred on Tuesday night near the village of al-Khawbah in the Jizan region.
The rebels also said yesterday they had taken control of the Jabal al-Dukhan area after defeating Saudi forces there.
Saudi Arabia was allowing the Yemeni army to use the mountainous area to launch attacks against them and they would take action if this continued, the rebels said.
Reporting the cross-border raid, the official Saudi news agency said gunmen fired on Saudi patrols in Jabal al-Dukhan town, killing one security officer and wounding 11.
The 1,500km border between Yemen and Saudi Arabia is a security worry for the kingdom, which is building a hi-tech border fence to prevent infiltration.
Saudi Arabia and the United States fear the conflict in Yemen’s north and a separatist movement in the south will enable al Qa’eda to establish a stronger foothold in Yemen.
Such fears were compounded in August, when a suicide bomber posing as a repentant al Qa’eda militant tried to kill the kingdom’s counter-terrorism chief after coming from Yemen.
Arab countries allied to the US, such as predominantly Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Egypt, fear Shiite power Iran could gain influence in Yemen through the rebels.
Yemen’s army launched Operation Scorched Earth in August to crush the rebellion. Aid groups say about 150,000 people have been displaced by the fighting, which first broke out in 2004.
The rebels say they are fighting political, economic and religious marginalisation by Yemen’s central government.
* Reuters
Have your say
See also
Other World stories
Your View
- Are you concerned with the standard of education your children receive?
- What would you like to see included in the new law on smoking?
- What can be done to ease the increasing cat population in the UAE?
- Would you hand back Dh5m if you found it in your bank account by mistake?
- What would you like to see in the new code of conduct for schools?
Most popular stories
- Dubai Metro's music causes disharmony
- Education faces up to double challenge
- The apartheid will end when Israelis have to face its cost
- Police raid illegal plastic surgery clinic
- UAE banks’ debt woes to grow
- For Burj refunds, go to Dubai
- New guide to being a better boss
- Hunt for mother of abandoned baby
- Interpol warrant for runaway fraudster
- Dubizzle hits top gear with capital site

