Some 100 UN staff and more than 80 foreign diplomats have been evacuated from Yemen, following the night of intensive airstrikes by Saudi-led forces. Twenty-four people were killed and 43 injured over the last 24 hours, the Yemeni Interior Ministry said.
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Among those killed and injured were Yemeni troops, police, security forces and civilians, the ministry said in a statement, cited by the state news agency Saba. Fourteen buildings were destroyed, it added.
#Yemen#sanaa da bombardıman devam ediyor. Bu seferki çok siddetli. Dumanlar yükseliyor, havada barut kokusu var pic.twitter.com/4rY7qSKxee
— khaldender (@myystifyy) March 28, 2015
The deteriorating security situation has led to the United Nations evacuating its estimated 100 staff from the capital, Sanaa, Deputy Spokesman for the Secretary-General told Tass news agency.
“Some of the international staff have been temporarily relocated from Sanaa to Djibouti or Addis Ababa [the capitals of Djibouti and Ethiopia, respectively],” Farhan Haq said. “Thirteen international officers remain in Yemen to help with the vital humanitarian effort. The rest have left the country on a plane.”
Saudi Arabian Defense Minister Prince Mohammed bin Salman Saud
said earlier on Saturday that three Saudi aircraft were sent to
evacuate a UN mission in Sanaa, according to Al Arabiya.
The same news outlet reported that 86 Arab and Western diplomats
were evacuated by Saudi Arabia's navy from Yemen's southern city
of Aden. The evacuation mission involved two navy ships, as well
as planes and commandos.
The diplomats were reportedly taken to Saudi Arabia's Red Sea
port of Jeddah.
#Yemen - #Saudi lead airstrike in south west #Sanaa, Huge blasts & fire seen near the Faj Attan mount pic.twitter.com/Ogeklp1cm7
— Terrormonitor.org (@Terror_Monitor) March 28, 2015
Massive evacuations were preceded by a night of airstrikes on the
capital of Sanaa, described as “unprecedentedly strong”
by a witness, who spoke to Sputnik news agency. The strikes were
reported to have targeted military bases in Sanaa, including the
base of the Yemeni Republican Guard and a missile depot.
The airstrikes lasted “all through the night and stopped at
dawn," a resident told Reuters.
Early Saturday morning Saudi-led air forces attacked a convoy of
Houthi armored vehicles, tanks and military trucks that were on
their way to the port city of Aden in southern Yemen. Aden had
served as a refuge to ousted President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi,
who fled Yemen on Thursday.
Shiite Houthi forces shot down a Saudi Arabia-led coalition jet
in the north of Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, Al Mayadeen TV channel
reported, adding that a Sudanese pilot was arrested.
Two Saudi pilots, who ejected over the Red Sea late on Friday,
after their fighter plane suffered a “technical problem” were
rescued with US assistance, Reuters reported citing Saudi Press
Agency.
According to (Houthis) Al-Masirah TV , a fighter jet was downed northern #Sanaa by air defences #Decisive_Stormpic.twitter.com/wuKl56JXDx
— Ali Hashem علي هاشم (@alihashem_tv) March 27, 2015
The Yemeni Interior Ministry has in its Saturday statement described the Saudi-led airstrikes as a “flagrant violation of Yemen’s sovereignty”. All military units have been ordered to “intensify their combat readiness to counter aggression,” the statement said.
Saudi King Salman meanwhile addressed the summit of Arab leaders in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh, saying that the military campaign in Yemen against Houthi fighters would continue until its targets are achieved. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi has called for the creation of a joint Arab army and said the military campaign in Yemen should last until Houthis capitulate.