Airstrikes kill 8 Yemeni Huthis triggering fierce battles

New escalation threatens fragile truce in Red Sea city of Hodeida reached after United Nations-brokered peace talks in Sweden late last year.

HODEIDAH - Saudi-led coalition airstrikes killed eight Yemeni Huthi rebels near the port of Hodeidah on Monday, triggering fierce battles around the flashpoint city, local officials said.

The new escalation threatens a fragile truce in the Red Sea city that was reached after United Nations-brokered peace talks in Sweden late last year.

Several more rebels were wounded in Monday's raids that targeted military positions of the Iran-backed Huthis north of Hodeidah, two local officials said.

Clashes erupted several hours later between Yemeni government forces and the Huthis in Hodeidah's eastern and southern outskirts.

One correspondent reported the use of heavy artillery and a resident south of Hodeidah also said by phone that "we have been hearing artillery shelling since the early hours of Monday".

The Saudis intervened in Yemen in 2015 at the head of a military coalition against the Huthi rebels, who had seized control of the capital Sanaa.

Since then, tens of thousands have died in the conflict, most of them civilians, and millions more have been driven to the brink of famine, according to humanitarian organisations.

The renewed fighting in Hodeidah marked the first battles there since the warring sides established joint observation posts in late October as part of de-escalation moves in the city.

Before the UN-brokered peace talks in December last year, there had been heavy fighting for the port, which is vital for aid and food imports.

Government loyalists backed by the Saudi-led military coalition had launched an offensive to retake Hodeidah from the rebels in June 2018.

In May 2019, the UN announced that the rebels had withdrawn from Hodeidah and two other nearby ports, the first step on the ground since the truce deal.

The new clashes come after the UN envoy to Yemen, Martin Griffiths, said on Friday that air strikes had sharply declined in number over the past two weeks, pointing to the possibility of a general ceasefire in the war-torn nation.

Griffiths said the rate of air strikes had fallen by 80 percent during that period, adding that it was perhaps an "important sign that something is changing in Yemen".