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Houthi rebels in Yemen have accused the US and UK of killing at the least 16 folks of their newest strikes aimed toward deterring the Iran-backed militants from attacking delivery within the Red Sea.
The Houthis made the declare on a rebel-controlled tv channel after the western allies launched a number of strikes on Yemen, focusing on 13 websites. The assaults destroyed eight Houthi drones in Yemen and over the Red Sea which “presented a threat to US and coalition forces, and merchant vessels in the region”, the US army’s Central Command mentioned on Friday.
“These actions are necessary to protect our forces, ensure freedom of navigation, and make international waters safer and more secure for US coalition, and merchant vessels,” Centcom added.
The UK’s defence ministry mentioned British forces participated in a joint operation “against Houthi military facilities to degrade their ability to persist with their attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden”.
The defence ministry mentioned its evaluation was ongoing, however that it had seen “no evidence to indicate that UK strikes have caused civilian casualties at this stage”. It added: “We take any claims of civilian casualties extremely seriously.”
The US army didn’t instantly reply to a request for touch upon the Houthis’ claims that 16 folks had been killed. The rebels’ claims couldn’t be independently verified.
US and UK forces have launched dozens of strikes in opposition to the Houthis’ army infrastructure because the rebels started mounting assaults in opposition to service provider delivery and US naval vessels within the Red Sea following the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas conflict final October.
The Houthis, an Islamist militant group that controls Sana’a, the Yemeni capital, and many of the poor Arab state’s northern areas, say their actions are in assist of the Palestinians and in opposition to Israel’s offensive in Gaza.
Attacks by the group, which is a part of a community of Iranian-backed militant teams that make up the so-called axis of resistance in opposition to Israel and the US, have severely disrupted visitors via one of many world’s most necessary maritime commerce routes.
The Houthis have launched scores of assaults on ships, seizing at the least one vessel, sinking one other and killing at the least three crew members. The menace posed by the rebels has prompted many service provider vessels to keep away from transiting via the Red Sea and raised delivery charges.
The US has accused Iran of supporting the Houthis, supplying the rebels with drone and missile expertise and intelligence.
The Houthis have managed Sana’a since ousting the federal government in 2014 as Yemen descended into civil warfare. The battle drew in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which led an Arab coalition to battle the Houthis.
A fragile truce between Saudi Arabia, the Houthis and different Yemeni factions has been in place for greater than two years. But the Israel-Hamas warfare has stalled a UN-backed peace course of.
The rebels have vowed to proceed their assaults on delivery so long as Israel is combating Hamas in Gaza.