More than 100 Houthi members killed as Yemeni army inflicts heavy losses on militia in Marib

In a blatant challenge to the international community and in disregard of all international laws and norms, the Houthi militia has struck the wall with all international and UN calls to stop their terrorist attacks, as the Iranian-backed militia continues its repeated operations against Marib.
In battles described as one of the fiercest confrontations
since the beginning of the Houthis’ second attack on Marib at the beginning of
this year, the Yemeni army forces and tribes, with the support of coalition
fighters, achieved great progress in western Marib governorate on Monday, April
19, taking control of all the areas between the Kassara and Mashjah fronts
after 29 hours of battles with the Houthi militia, which left dozens dead,
wounded and detained.
Field sources confirmed that the army and tribes took
control over all the sites and areas between the two fronts after the
restoration of Hamma al-Sayd and continued to advance towards Qarn Hailan and
Wadi al-Mukhdara.
The sources indicated that the Houthis lost 54 dead and 75
prisoners in the battles when the two fronts merged, in addition to the
destruction of a “tank, three armored vehicles and 13 corps” belonging to the
militia, confirming the death of the Houthi leader of the Kassara front, Abu
Khaled al-Sufyani, along with his companions.
The Yemeni army website stated that the battles intensified
after an infiltration attempt by Houthi elements towards one of the military
sites in the Mashjah front, but the army and resistance fighters thwarted the
infiltration and caused all the terrorist elements to be killed or wounded.
The website pointed out that “the army artillery targeted
Houthi artillery sites at the same front, and targeted separate locations of
the militia and inflicted losses on lives and equipment, while the coalition
aircraft destroyed an armored vehicle and hostile reinforcements on its way to
the front, and in other raids targeted militia gatherings in separate
locations. All of them resulted in great human and material losses among the
militias.”
Reports indicated that Houthi artillery targeted the village
of Dakhnan in the city of Al-Durayhimi, southern Hodeidah, and the bombing resulted
in the death of a citizen and the injury of another.
On Monday, a number of Houthi militia members were killed,
and others were injured as a result of the renewed battles with the Yemeni
National Army forces in Saada governorate.
The commander of the Seventh Border Guard Brigade, Brigadier
Fares al-Rabadi, explained, “The National Army fought fierce confrontations
with the Houthi militia, in which the two sides used various types of weapons.”
He stressed that the forces of the Seventh Brigade were able to defeat the
militia members, who retreated to their previous positions after many of their
fighters were killed or wounded.
In conjunction with the battles, the artillery of the
National Army and the Hellfire missiles of the Arab coalition forces targeted
sites and fortifications where the militia's medium and heavy bullets were
stationed, which led to their destruction.
Separately, the Houthi militia stormed four of the mosques
in Dhamar, including the Great Mosque in the village of Hur, the Dar al-Hadith
Center in the Zarajah area and the Al-Saeed Mosque in the city of Dhamar, and
took those in charge of the mosques to unknown destinations.
Observers believe that with the increase in Houthi attacks
and the escalation of international calls to stop them, the militia leaders
showed determination to continue the war, which exposes the militias' efforts
to prolong the war and increase the suffering of Yemenis. This Houthi
intransigence reveals the urgent need for actual pressure to stop the military
escalation and surrender to calls for peace, given that the continued
escalation, violations and racist practices of the militia sharply exacerbate
the humanitarian situation in Yemen.