Yemen’s Houthis say Israeli strikes kill 9 after missile attack

Update Yemen’s Houthis say Israeli strikes kill 9 after missile attack
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Above, smoke rises from a power station following Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa, Yemen on Dec. 19, 2024. (Reuters)
Update Smoke rises from a power station following Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters)
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Smoke rises from a power station following Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters)
Update Firefighters extinguish fire at a power station following Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa. (Reuters)
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Firefighters extinguish fire at a power station following Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa. (Reuters)
Update A member of a bomb disposal unit inspects the rubble of a destroyed school building in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv after the campus was struck by debris from a missile fired from Yemen. (AFP)
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A member of a bomb disposal unit inspects the rubble of a destroyed school building in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv after the campus was struck by debris from a missile fired from Yemen. (AFP)
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Updated 19 December 2024

Yemen’s Houthis say Israeli strikes kill 9 after missile attack

Yemen’s Houthis say Israeli strikes kill 9 after missile attack
  • Raids ‘targeted two central power plants’ in Yemen’s capital Sanaa
  • Netanyahu says Houthis will pay 'very heavy price' for harming Israel

SANAA: Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis said Israeli air strikes on Thursday killed nine people, after the group fired a missile toward Israel, badly damaging a school.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened further retaliation.
The Houthis, who control most of Yemen’s population centers, have repeatedly launched missiles at Israel since the Gaza war broke out more than a year ago.
Israel has previously hit back against targets in Yemen, but Thursday’s were the first against the Houthi-held capital Sanaa.
“The Israeli enemy targeted ports in Hodeida and power stations in Sanaa, and the Israeli aggression resulted in the martyrdom of nine civilian martyrs,” Houthi leader Abdul Malik Al-Houthi said in a lengthy speech broadcast by the Houthi’s Al-Masira TV.
Al-Masira had earlier reported the raids that “targeted two central power plants” in and around Sanaa, while in Hodeida it said “the enemy launched four aggressive raids targeting the port... and two raids targeting” an oil facility.
It said the strikes killed seven people at Al-Saleef port, while two more were killed and others wounded in the strike on the oil facility.
Hodeida is a key entry point for fuel and humanitarian aid to impoverished Yemen, which has been ravaged for years by its own war.
Israel said it struck the targets in Yemen after intercepting a missile fired from the country, a strike the Houthis subsequently claimed.
Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree said the militia fired ballistic missiles at “two specific and sensitive military targets... in the occupied Yaffa area,” referring to the Jaffa region near Tel Aviv.
Israel’s military said it “conducted precise strikes on Houthi military targets in Yemen — including ports and energy infrastructure in Sanaa, which the Houthis have been using in ways that effectively contributed to their military actions.”
AFP photos from Ramat Gan, in the Tel Aviv area, showed part of a school building pancaked from an explosion, behind a sculpture of an animal with polka dots.
The Houthis said later that they launched a drone at a “military target of the Israeli enemy in the occupied Yaffa area.” There was no confirmation from the Israeli side.
The military said inquiries into the initial attack showed “it is likely that the damage was caused by partial interception of the missile launched from Yemen and that the missile warhead was the part that exploded and damaged the school.”
The Houthis belong to the Iran-backed “axis of resistance,” along with Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which has been weakened after a conflict with Israel and the loss of its Syrian supply line following former president Bashar Assad’s ouster.
“After Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Assad regime in Syria, the Houthis are almost the last remaining arm of Iran’s axis of evil,” Netanyahu said.
“The Houthis are learning and will learn the hard way, that those who strike Israel will pay a very heavy price for it.”
The Houthi leader retorted: “We are fully convinced of our position and are ready to confront any level of escalation.”
Israel’s military had initially announced the interception of a missile launched from Yemen “before it crossed into Israeli territory.”
Iran denounced the subsequent Israeli raids as a “flagrant violation of the principles and norms of international law and the UN Charter.”
Palestinian militant group Hamas, at war with Israel in Gaza, called Israel’s retaliatory strikes a “dangerous development.”
Thursday’s missile interception was the second this week, after Israel’s military said it intercepted a launch from Yemen on Monday. The Houthis also claimed that launch, saying it was aimed at “a military target of the Israeli enemy in the occupied area of Yaffa.”
Also Monday, an Israeli navy missile boat intercepted a drone in the Mediterranean after it was launched from Yemen, the military said.
The Houthis have said they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians and pledged Monday to continue operations “until the aggression on Gaza stops and the siege is lifted.”
On December 9, a drone claimed by Houthis exploded on the top floor of a residential building in the central Israel city of Yavne, causing no casualties.
In July, a Houthi drone attack in Tel Aviv killed an Israeli civilian, prompting retaliatory strikes on Hodeida which killed at least nine people, according to the Houthis.
The Houthis have also regularly targeted shipping in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, leading to retaliatory strikes on Houthi targets by United States and sometimes British forces.
Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said the Houthis had become a “global threat,” pointing to Iran’s support for the Houthis.
“We will continue to act against anyone, anyone in the Middle East, that threatens the state of Israel.”


Former Iraq PM Al-Maliki could heavily influence election despite troubled past

Updated 15 sec ago

Former Iraq PM Al-Maliki could heavily influence election despite troubled past

Former Iraq PM Al-Maliki could heavily influence election despite troubled past
Maliki, in his mid-70s, was pressured to step down in 2014 by an unusually broad array of critics
His political roots stretch back decades, shaped by opposition to Saddam Hussein’s authoritarian rule

BAGHDAD: Former Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki remains a potent force in Iraqi politics despite long-standing accusations that he fueled sectarian strife and failed to stop Islamic State from seizing large areas of the country a decade ago.
As leader of the influential State of Law, a Shiite Muslim coalition, he is seen as having enough clout to decide who will become Iraq’s next prime minister after a parliamentary election on November 11.
Maliki, in his mid-70s, was pressured to step down in 2014 by an unusually broad array of critics — the US, Iran, Sunni leaders and Iraq’s top Shiite cleric — after Islamic State’s rapid territorial gains in 2014.
His divisive years as premier were blamed by many Iraqis for fostering sectarian strife between majority Shiites and minority Sunnis, while chronic problems like joblessness, poor public services and graft were left to fester.

MALIKI SIGNED SADDAM’S EXECUTION ORDER
Yet despite the criticism, Al-Maliki — a shrewd political operator — staged a comeback in the years that followed, quietly building influence through ties to armed militias, the security services and the judiciary, analysts say.
His political roots stretch back decades, shaped by opposition to Saddam Hussein’s authoritarian rule and a long exile that forged his ideological convictions.
Sentenced to death under Saddam for his role in the outlawed Shiite Islamic Dawa Party, Al-Maliki spent nearly 25 years in exile, mostly in Syria and Iran, agitating for the dictator’s downfall.
Like many exiles, he returned to Iraq after Saddam’s fall — the end of a Sunni-led regime that had long oppressed Shiites and Kurds.
Maliki signed Saddam’s execution order in red ink, paving the way for masked gunmen to place a noose around his neck and pull a lever that quickly ended his life.
Maliki, a friend of Shiite power Iran, had fulfilled his life-long goal of wresting power from the country’s Sunnis, but his drive to entrench Shi’ite dominance proved his downfall.
He was blamed by Sunni leaders for not doing enough to crack down on Shi’ite militias and focusing instead on asserting authority over restless Sunni provinces such as Anbar in western Iraq.
Maliki, who served as premier from 2006-2014, denied that he has a sectarian outlook.
“I am not fighting in Anbar because they are Sunnis, as I have also fought Shi’ite militias. Al Qaeda and militias are one — they both kill people and blow them up. Both rely on perverts and deviants,” Al-Maliki told Reuters in 2014.

MALIKI’S POLICIES HELPED ALIENATE SUNNIS, CRITICS SAY
His term in office was marred by sectarian bloodshed and an anti-American and anti-government insurgency, and accusations that he marginalized Sunnis, one factor in the rise of Sunni Islamic State.
To detractors, the dour Al-Maliki threw down the gauntlet with stunning speed in 2011 when his Shi’ite-led government demanded the arrest of a Sunni Muslim vice president — seemingly moments after the departure of US troops in December of that year.
The move called into question Maliki’s commitment to any sort of democracy. The man who plotted from exile against Saddam for years now drew comparisons with his former enemy.
Critics say Maliki’s sectarian policies drove Sunnis into the arms of Islamic State.
Maliki left office reluctantly in 2014 after security forces crumbled and fled in the face of a lightning advance by Islamic State, which declared a medieval-style caliphate.
In 2015, an Iraqi parliamentary panel called for Al-Maliki and dozens of other top officials to stand trial over the fall of the northern city of Mosul to Islamic State.

MALIKI HAILS FROM POLITICALLY ENGAGED SOUTHERN IRAQI FAMILY
A little-known politician in Iraq before the US-led invasion, Al-Maliki was a compromise pick to lead a wobbly coalition government in 2006.
Initially seen as a Shiite Islamist, Maliki’s initial willingness to put aside sectarianism and quell violence was called into question in a leaked US government memo.
“Despite Maliki’s reassuring words, repeated reports from our commanders on the ground contributed to our concerns about Maliki’s government,” National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley wrote to President George W. Bush in the memo.
He went on to list problems including non-delivery of services to Sunni areas and the removal of Iraq’s most effective commanders on a sectarian basis.
Maliki was born in 1950 in Janaja, a southern village among date groves on the Euphrates, into a politically engaged family — his grandfather wrote poetry inciting rebellion against Iraq’s British occupiers and his father was a fervent Arab nationalist.
Maliki was briefly arrested in 1979 and then fled, narrowly escaping Saddam’s police. His family’s land was seized and dozens of his relatives were killed over the next decade. He did not see his home village again until after the 2003 invasion.
He became deputy head of the committee that purged former officials in Saddam’s widely feared Baath Party.