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Houthis vow revenge after accusing Saudi Arabia of attacking Sanaa Airport

The Houthi movement, which is aligned with Iran and controls the northern part of Yemen, accused Saudi Arabia Monday of airstrikes on Sanaa's international airport. They also vowed retaliation.

Yahya Saree, the Houthi's military spokesperson, called the attacks a "blatant act of aggression". He said that they ended a long-running period of deescalation. He stated that Saudi Arabia would be held accountable for the attacks and they would not go unanswered.

The Saudi government's communications office did not immediately respond to these accusations. On Monday, Yemen's internationally recognized government claimed that its armed forces had?targeted the runway at Sanaa International Airport in order to prevent an Iranian aircraft from landing. According to a spokesman from Yemen's army, the plane landed safely at Hodeidah Airport, which is controlled by the Houthis. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States support the government that operates out of the southern port city of?Aden. Yemen has been battling civil wars and proxy attacks from foreign powers since more than a century, when the Houthis took over the capital city and forced the internationally recognized government to move to the south. A 2022 truce that was agreed upon after years of fighting between the Houthis and a Saudi-led alliance that caused one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world has held despite the regional escalation linked to the Israel/Gaza conflict, which saw the Houthis attack Red Sea shipping as well as the Iran Conflict. Yemen's civil war, which has lasted for more than 20 years, flared last year when a United Arab Emirates-backed movement that swept through the south splintered the Saudi-led alliance created to combat the Houthi group.

Moammar bin Muthahar Al-Eryan is the Information Minister in the internationally recognized government. He said that the Houthis had detained an aircraft belonging to the International Committee of the Red Cross and were holding the pilot and copilot.

On Monday, the defence minister of the government said that the government had exhausted all diplomatic efforts to convince Iran and the Houthis not to violate Yemeni airspace by Iranian aircraft. He stated that government forces will respond to any hostile aircraft invading Yemeni airspace by "all available means" and hold Iran accountable. Reporting by Tala Abouhassira and Eman Abohassira, Editing by Gareth Jones and Peter Graff and Sharon Singleton

(source: Reuters)