BFF-51 Port still running in Yemen’s Hodeida after air strikes

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YEMEN-CONFLICT-HODEIDA-PORT

Port still running in Yemen’s Hodeida after air strikes

SANAA, Nov 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Two Saudi-led air strikes hit the main
entrance to the rebel-held port of Hodeida but the docks were still operating
normally on Tuesday, the port’s deputy director told AFP.

The vital docks, through which 80 percent of Yemen’s commercial imports and
nearly all UN supervised humanitarian aid pass, has been at the centre of
international concern about a new drive to recapture Hodeida which the Yemeni
government launched with Saudi-led support on November 1.

Monday’s strikes, in which port staff said four rebels were killed and four
wounded, was the first to hit the docks in 12 days of intensified bombardment
and ground fighting in the Red Sea coastal city of some 600,000 people, many
of whom have fled or now fear a siege.

The main gate “was the target of air strikes… but the port is operating
normally,” the port’s deputy director Yehya Sharafeddin told AFP by
telephone. He said three guards had been wounded.

Four other port employees told AFP that one strike had killed a rebel
commander and three of his guards, while a second strike had wounded another
commander and his guards.

They said a single-storey guardroom had taken a direct hit from the
strikes.

Rebel-controlled media reported two air strikes but made no mention of
casualties.

Saudi-led coalition spokesman Colonel Turki al-Maliki had no immediate
confirmation of the strikes but told AFP he would check.

Residents of Hodeida reported that the city was calm on Tuesday after a
lull in bombardment during the night as Western governments stepped up calls
for a halt to the offensive to pave the way for peace talks.

British foreign minister Jeremy Hunt held talks on Monday with both Saudi
King Salman and his powerful son and heir apparent Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman.

“The heavy fighting stopped on Monday evening. During the night we heard
sporadic gunfire but then situation seems stable todat,” one Hodeida resident
told AFP by telephone.

“We are not hearing explosions like we have for the past two weeks.”

International concern about damage to the port has been heightened by
widespread malnutrition after four years of war that has placed some 14
million Yemenis at risk of famine, according to UN agencies. Many more are
dependent on food aid.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned on Monday of a possible
“catastrophic situation” if the port is destroyed.

“The fighting must stop, a political debate must begin and we must prepare
a massive humanitarian response to avoid the worst next year,” he said.

Hodeida has been controlled by the Huthi Shiite rebels since 2014 when they
overran the capital Sanaa then swept through most of the rest of the country.

The Saudi-led coalition intervened the following year and pro-government
forces have since recaptured nearly all of the south and much of the Red Sea
coast in a grinding war of attrition.

BSS/AFP/RY/1615 hrs