Thousands of Civilians Flee North Yemen Battle

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Some 10,000 families have fled the northern city of Amran in three days to escape an intensified battle between the army and Shiite rebels, the Yemeni Red Crescent said Tuesday.

Launching a "call for help", the organization said 5,000 more families were trapped by fighting inside the city.

Amran, 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of the capital Sanaa, is home to an estimated 120,000 inhabitants.

It has been the scene of fighting between the Huthis -- also known as Ansarullah -- troops and tribes on both sides since February as the Shiite rebels advanced from their mountain strongholds towards Sanaa.

"The bodies of 60 people killed, mostly civilians and soldiers, have been brought to the hospital since Saturday," said a medic at Amran's main hospital.

"Around 180 wounded, many of them civilians, were also admitted," the source told Agence France Presse, which could not immediately compile a full toll.

Army reinforcements sent to Amran on Sunday were locked in fierce clashes with Shiite rebels in Dharawan, 15 kilometers (nine miles) from Sanaa, and in and around the city itself, military sources said.

Early on Tuesday, Yemeni fighter jets bombed Amran's Warak neighborhood, hours after it was seized by rebels.

Huthis have been battling the central government for years from their Saada heartland, complaining of marginalization under former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who stepped down in 2012 after a year-long uprising.

Clashes erupted anew last month in the north, ending an 11-day truce agreed after mediation backed by U.N. envoy Jamal Benomar.

The rebels say a federalization plan agreed in February after national talks as part of a political transition would divide Yemen into rich and poor regions.

They seized areas of Amran province in fighting with tribes in February that killed more than 150 people.

Comments 1
Missing ArabDemocrat.com 08 July 2014, 17:52

Another rogue sectarian militia funded and armed by the Mullahs of Iran.