Yemeni rebels raid dozens of homes of opponents in capital

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Yemeni rebels raid dozens of homes of opponents in capital
Yemeni fighters, loyal to exiled President, sit in the back of an armed pickup truck in the city of Daleh, 280 kilometres south of the capital Sanaa.

Sanaa - Houthis claimed they are affiliated with the Daesh group and Al Qaeda.

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Published: Mon 31 Aug 2015, 11:20 PM

Last updated: Tue 1 Sep 2015, 1:27 AM

Houthi rebels in Yemen's capital have raided dozens of homes of political opponents and local NGO workers, claiming they are affiliated with the Daesh group and Al Qaeda, security officials said on Monday.
The officials, who are neutral in a conflict that has splintered the security forces, said the raids began a day earlier.
Pro-government forces backed by Saudi-led airstrikes have driven the Houthis from much of the country's south in recent weeks, but the rebels still hold the capital, Sanaa, which they seized nearly a year ago.
The officials said that last week the Houthis detained at least 20 people, one of whom works for the UN, near the capital's presidential palace. Houthi officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Also on Monday, mortar rounds fired by the rebels killed four civilians and wounded six in Yemen's third largest city of Taez, medical officials and witnesses said.
The exiled Yemeni government in Saudi Arabia declared Taez a disaster zone last week. Since then, the city's Al Radwah hospital has stopped admitting patients due to a severe lack of medical resources, officials at the hospital said, leaving Taez with only six working hospitals out of 21.
All officials and witnesses requested anonymity because they are not authorised to brief journalists or for fear of reprisals.
Yemen's conflict pits the Iran-supported Houthis and allied army units against southern separatists, local and tribal militias, militants and forces loyal to exiled President AbdRabbo Mansour Hadi. A Saudi-led and US-backed coalition has been striking the rebels and their allies since March.
The conflict has killed some 2,000 civilians, according to the United Nations.

A Houthi militant walks past graffiti painted by pro-Houthi activists on the gate of the Saudi embassy in Yemen's capital Sanaa.
A Houthi militant walks past graffiti painted by pro-Houthi activists on the gate of the Saudi embassy in Yemen's capital Sanaa.

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