Yemeni army kills 97 militiamen, captures 120 following attack on Houthi sites

Yemeni government forces, backed by the Arab Coalition,
killed 97 Houthi militiamen and captured 120, including commanders, in the
governorate of Al-Dhalea south-west of Yemen, military sources confirmed to Al
Arabiya on Wednesday.
During the battle in the city of Qa’atabah, north of
Al-Dhalea, government forces were able to push Houthis to retreat to the areas
of Maazoub and Al-Famer.
The government forces had launched a surprise attack on
Houthi posts in Al-Daaeri Al-Gharbi in Qa’atabah, and burnt some of their
military vehicles.
Special forces are now securing the city’s neighborhoods and
searching for Houthi militia cells.
On Sunday, around 40 Houthis, including commanders, were
killed in confrontations with the national army north of Al-Dhalea.
Confrontations had erupted in several areas in the southern outskirts of
Qa’atabah as well.
Army forces shelled Houthi posts in Humran al-Sada, Dar
al-Soqma and Maazub Amer, north and west of Qa’atabah. According to
eyewitnesses in the city of Damt, the bodies of 20 Houthis arrived to the city
from the Maryas front.
Meanwhile, Arab Coalition forces destroyed Houthi military
vehicles in Hajjah on Tuesday, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.
According to the Ministry of Defense’s official website
‘September Net’, the Coalition airstrikes targeted a Houthi camp in the Abs
district, west of Hajjah, killing and wounding several Houthi members and
destroying six tanks.
The Coalition’s airstrikes also targeted Houthi sites in
Al-Jar farms in Abs destroying two vehicles and two platforms used to fire
Katyusha rockets.
Yemen’s army forces, backed by popular resistance, also
targeted rallies and gatherings of Houthis militias in the central Al-Baidha
province on Wednesday.
According to ‘September Net’, the army forces launched
rockets targeting Houthi fighters’ gatherings in the Qirba area, in Zahir
district, destroying a combat car and killing three Houthi members, while
injuring others.
On Tuesday, Yemen’s Houthi-run Masirah TV had cited a
military official saying seven drones staged attacks on vital Saudi
installations.
Two oil-pumping stations for the East-West pipeline were hit
by explosive-laden drones, Saudi Arabia's Minister of Energy, Industry and
Mineral Resources Khalid al-Falih said, calling the attack "an act of
terrorism" that targeted global oil supplies.