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Saudi coalition: Missile fired from Yemen intercepted by military

Published May 31st, 2016 - 04:00 GMT
This is the second ballistic missile fired into Saudi territory by Houthi rebels that the coalition has intercepted since April. (AFP/File)
This is the second ballistic missile fired into Saudi territory by Houthi rebels that the coalition has intercepted since April. (AFP/File)

Leaders of a Saudi-led Arab coalition fighting the Shia Houthi group in Yemen announced late Monday that Saudi forces had intercepted a "ballistic missile" fired from Yemen into the kingdom’s territory, according to the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

In a statement cited by the news agency, coalition commanders said they would "reconsider the policy of self-restraint that has been applied since the ceasefire went into effect [in Yemen] in April".

They also vowed to take "all measures necessary to defend the sovereignty" of Saudi Arabia in light of Monday’s alleged missile attack.

This was the second ballistic missile fired into Saudi territory by the Houthis and their allies (forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh) that the coalition claims to have intercepted since the April ceasefire went into effect.

According to the coalition statement, the missile was intercepted by Saudi air-defense forces late Monday, with coalition forces responding by destroying the launch pad in Yemen from which the warhead was fired.

Earlier Monday, Yemen’s Houthi-run SABA news website quoted a pro-Houthi military source as saying that Houthi fighters and pro-Saleh forces had targeted Saudi Arabia’s southwestern Najran province.

Meanwhile, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, the UN’s envoy to Yemen, said that intransigence by both sides of the conflict had led to "continued deadlock in the political and security files" at peace talks currently underway in Kuwait.

According to the Houthi-affiliated Al-Masirah television channel, Houthi and pro-Saleh representatives recently told Kuwait’s foreign minister that ongoing airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition against Houthi positions in Yemen were damaging the prospects for a successful outcome of the talks in Kuwait.

By Ahmed al-Masri

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