Coalition accuses Yemen's rebels of breaking cease-fire

The governments of Yemen, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are accusing Houthi Shiite rebels of breaking the cease-fire in Yemen's key port of Hodeida and refusing to withdraw their forces in accordance with a December agreement.
Ambassadors from the three countries urged the U.N. Security Council in a letter circulated Tuesday to call on the Houthis to implement the agreement reached in Stockholm and to condemn their continuing violations of the cease-fire.
The coalition countries accused the Houthis of refusing to withdraw from two smaller ports of Salif and Ras Issa as called for in the agreement, and of reinforcing their military positions in civilian areas of Hodeida, including by constructing trenches and barriers.
They said their discipline and restraint "has not been reciprocated by the Houthis."
AFP.
Sana'a – Yemen’s Houthi movement announced on Thursday that it had launched a multi-warhead ballistic missile targeting central Israel,…
Aden  – Southern Armed Forces in Yemen have successfully dismantled a Houthi cell operating in the southern region, in what officials de…
Aden – The internationally recognized government of Yemen has welcomed the United States’ latest round of sanctions against the Iran-ba…