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Saada has been a site of violent confrontations for years between the Yemeni government and the rebels known as the Houthi movement. The conflict was sparked in June 2004 by Ali Abdullah Saleh government's attempt to arrest Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, the Zaydi religious leader who founded the Houthi movement and a former Al-Haqq parliamentarian on whose head the government had placed a US ...
Yahya Qasim Sare'e (Arabic: يحيى قاسم سريع; born 1970) is a Yemeni military officer who is the spokesperson for the SPC-led Yemeni Armed Forces, a renegade faction of Yemen's armed forces closely related with the Houthi movement.
Houthis; الحوثيون: Slogan of the Houthi movement (top-to-bottom): God is the Greatest [a] Death to America [b] Death to Israel [c] Curse be Upon the Jews [d] Victory to Islam [e] Territory controlled by the Houthi movement shown in dark green: Leaders: Abdul-Malik al-Houthi (since 2004) Hussein al-Houthi † (1994–2004) † Spokesman ...
A recent Houthi attack had resulted in the damage of a school, per the outlet. Social media users are claiming to show H. A video shared on X claims to show missiles flying over Saudi Arabia ...
Yemen's Houthis have joined the Israel-Hamas war raging more than 1,000 miles from their seat of power in the Yemeni capital of Sanaa, declaring on Oct. 31 they had fired drones and missiles at ...
The United States military unleashed a wave of attacks targeting radar sites operated by Yemen's Houthi rebels over their assaults on shipping in the crucial Red Sea corridor, authorities said ...
The Houthis also reportedly attacked an army position, escalating the conflict further. [4] Flights into and out of Sana'a International Airport were suspended. [18] Houthi fighters attacked Sana'a in earnest on 19 September, shelling the state television station and clashing with both government forces and Sunni militias [citation needed].
Tribes and Politics in Yemen: A History of the Houthi Conflict. Oxford University Press. Caton, S. C. (2005). Yemen Chronicle: An Anthropology of War and Mediation. Hill and Wang. Clark, V. (2010). Yemen: Dancing on the Heads of Snakes. Yale University Press. Dresch, P. (2001). A History of Modern Yemen. Cambridge University Press.