Fragments fell to the ground after the interception of the drone over Abha International Airport, which has previously been targeted in alike assaults by the Iran-backed insurgents.
Twelve people were injured by falling debris on Thursday when the Saudi military blew up a Yemeni rebel drone targeting an airport close to the border, officials told.
Abha International Airport
The Huthis claimed responsibility for the attack in a tweet, saying they had targeted an airport “used for military activity against Yemen” and warning citizens to “stay away” from such areas.
The Huthis, fighting a Saudi-led coalition since 2015, has frequently established drone attacks at targets in the kingdom including airports and oil installations.
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In current weeks, they have also established deadly cross-border attacks for the first time against fellow coalition members of the United Arab Emirates, after suffering a series of battlefield defeats at the hands of UAE-trained pro-government forces.
“Saudi defense forces destroyed a drone launched towards Abha International Airport,” the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) told.
- The SPA told”12 civilians” were hurt when the unmanned aircraft was intercepted, including citizens of Bangladesh, India, Nepal, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka, as well as two Saudis.
In answer, the Saudi-led coalition told it would strike positions from which the Huthis launch drones in Sanaa, the rebel-held capital of Yemen.” We question civilians in Sanaa to evacuate civilian sites used for military purposes for the next 72 hours,” it told, quoted by SPA.
Civilian airport
“As a result of the interception process, some shrapnel of the drone was scattered after its interception inside the internal perimeter of the airport,” coalition spokesman Brigadier General Turki al-Maliki told SPA.
He told Abha was a “civilian airport that is protected under international humanitarian law” and accused the rebels of a “war crime”.
The White House told President Joe Biden reaffirmed in a phone call Wednesday with Saudi King Salman the “US commitment to support Saudi Arabia in the defense of its people and territory” from Huthi attacks.
Abha lies in the kingdom’s southwestern mountains and is popular, particularly during summer, with Saudis and expatriates desperate to escape the scorching heat.
Border provinces of Saudi Arabia have come under a frequent drone or missile attack by the rebels, in what the Huthis say is retaliation for a deadly bombing campaign carried out by coalition aircraft against rebel-held places.
Most have been safely intercepted by Saudi air defenses, but in late December an attack on Jizan province on the Red Sea coast saw two people killed and seven wounded.
In December, the coalition told the Huthis had fired more than 400 ballistic missiles and established over 850 attack drones in Saudi Arabia in the past seven years, killing a total of 59 civilians.
The UAE has also been on alert since a drone and missile attack killed three oil workers in Abu Dhabi on January 17.
Authorities have since thwarted three similar attacks.
The January 17 attack was the first deadly assault on the UAE claimed by the Huthis, opening a new phase in the Yemeni war and puncturing the Gulf state’s image as a regional haven.
The UAE-trained Giants Brigades has this year inflicted heavy losses on the Huthis, disrupting their efforts to seize Marib city, the government’s final significant stronghold in the rebel-dominated north.
Yemen’s civil war broke out in 2014 when the Huthis seized Sanaa, prompting the Saudi-led coalition to intervene the next year to prop up the internationally acknowledged government.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed directly or indirectly in the conflict, while millions have been replaced in what the UN calls the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis.
On Thursday, the Norwegian Refugee Council told civilian deaths and injuries in the war have nearly doubled since UN human rights monitors were controversially released in October.
“The removal of this crucial human rights investigative body took us back to unchecked, horrific violations,” NRC’s Yemen country director Erin Hutchinson told.