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Coalition says troops redeploying in Yemen, not withdrawing

A Yemeni pro-government fighter is pictured during fighting with Ansar Allah fighters on the south frontline of Marib, the last remaining government stronghold in northern Yemen, on Wednesday. - AFP
A Yemeni pro-government fighter is pictured during fighting with Ansar Allah fighters on the south frontline of Marib, the last remaining government stronghold in northern Yemen, on Wednesday. - AFP
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DUBAI: The coalition fighting the Ansar Allah in Yemen has said its troops were redeploying in line with its strategy to support Yemeni forces, but were not withdrawing.


Yemeni security sources said the Saudi military had withdrawn from a major military base in Burayqah district in the southern port city of Aden, removing troops, hardware and heavy artillery.


Some of the troops and equipment were loaded in warships in Aden port, while others flew out from the city's airport, the sources said. Long convoys of the kingdom's military were seen on Tuesday heading from Burayqah military base to Aden port, witnesses said.


The spokesman of the Saudi-led coalition, General Turki al Malki, said reports circulating about a Saudi military withdrawal from south Yemen were "baseless and unfounded".


"Movement and redeployment of troops based on operational and tactical assessment" was a standard operation "in all military forces across the world", General Malki said.


The new drawdown of Saudi forces followed intense diplomacy from the United States and the United Nations to end a seven-year-old conflict that has killed tens of thousands and put millions at risk of starvation.


US Envoy to Yemen Timothy Lenderking visited Riyadh this week as Washington pressed Saudi Arabia to lift a blockade on Ansar Allah-held ports, a condition from the group to start ceasefire talks.


However Riyadh first wants US weapons to help the kingdom strengthen its defence systems following Ansar Allah attacks on its territory with drones and ballistic missiles.


The US State Department approved its first major arms sale to Saudi Arabia under US President Joe Biden with the sale of 280 air-to-air missiles valued at up to $650 million, the Pentagon said last week.


Late on Wednesday, heavy blasts were heard across the capital Sanaa following air strikes by the coalition's warplanes, residents said. This followed several ballistic missiles fired by the Ansar Allah on Saudi southern regions and Yemeni provinces of Marib and Taiz, the Ansar Allah military spokesman said.


Ambassadors of the five permanent Security Council members also held a meeting with Saudi ambassador to Yemen, Mohammed al Jaber, where they stressed the need for de-escalation, including an immediate end to hostilities in Marib region.


"All Yemeni parties should engage in genuine dialogue in order to reach comprehensive political solution to end the crisis in Yemen and alleviate the humanitarian suffering of its people," a statement issued after the meeting said.


UNSC BLACKLISTS 3


Meanwhile, the United Nations Security Council blacklisted three Ansar Allah leaders for threatening the peace, security and stability of Yemen, subjecting them to a global asset freeze and travel ban and a targeted arms embargo.


The 15 council members agreed by consensus to impose sanctions on the head of the general staff leading the Ansar Allah's Marib offensive, Muhammad Abd Al Karim al Ghamari; a leader of Ansar Allah forces assigned to the Marib advance, Yusuf al Madani; and the Ansar Allah's assistant defence minister, Saleh Mesfer Saleh al Shaer, who is accused of helping the group acquire smuggled arms and weapons. - Reuters


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