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Yemeni officials say clashes kill 23 in Hodeidah, Marib

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Sanaa

Yemeni officials and tribal leaders said on Saturday that fighting between government forces and Houthi militia has killed at least two dozen people in the past three days in Marib province and the key port city of Hodeidah.
The officials said more than 23 people were killed and dozens were wounded from both sides in the most recent fighting for the oil-rich Marib.
Tribal leaders said the Houthis have deployed reinforcements to break government defenses in Marib, but they have made no progress.
Saudi-led forces have hit Houthi military convoys in the region’s desert, according to the tribal leaders.
In Hodeidah, fierce fighting erupted on Wednesday in the town of Durayhimi, just south of the strategic Hodeidah port, which handles about 70 prcent of Yemen’s commercial and humanitarian imports, Yemeni officials said.
They said at least one civilian was killed and seven others were wounded in the clashes, which were described as the fiercest violence in months between government forces and the Houthis.
Hodeida was the scene of bloody fighting in 2018, before the warring sides signed a UN-brokered agreement in December that year that included a cease-fire in the port city and an exchange of more than 15,000 prisoners. But the deal was never fully implemented.
The war in Yemen has spawned the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, leaving millions suffering from food and medical shortages. It has killed over 112,000 people, including fighters and civilians.—AP

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